Sujan Ayesha C, Slama Natalie E, Bateman Brian T, Ansley Deborah, Castellanos Carley, Young-Wolff Kelly C
Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA.
Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente Northern California, Pleasanton, CA, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend Rep. 2025 May 16;15:100345. doi: 10.1016/j.dadr.2025.100345. eCollection 2025 Jun.
Research to date evaluating the safety of benzodizapine use during pregnancy has shown mixed results and has relied on self-report or filled prescription data, which are unlikely to capture non-medical use and, consequently, could bias results. Therefore, research on non-medical benzodiazepine use during pregnancy is needed.
The present study used data from a large, healthcare system with universal screening for prenatal substance use via urine toxicology tests and information on filled prescriptions. We first evaluated the prevalence of pregnancies with non-medical benzodiazepine use (positive urine toxicology test and no filled prescriptions in the past year) and medical benzodiazepine use (positive urine toxicology test and >1 filled prescription in the past year). We also evaluated the presence of co-occurrence of substance use and mental health conditions among these pregnancies.
Our results showed that benzodiazepine use during early pregnancy was rare (<1 % had a positive toxicology test). However, more than one-third of those with a positive toxicology test did not have a filled prescription (i.e., had non-medical use) We also found similar rates of substance use and mental health conditions among pregnancies with medical and non-medical benzodiazepine use.
Our results suggest that research relying on prescription data alone and the medical system may be missing pregnant individuals using benzodiazepines. This points to a need for additional measures and screenings (e.g., urine toxicology tests) in both research and clinical settings. Our findings also underscore a need for additional services for pregnant individuals with both medical and non-medical benzodiazepine use.
迄今为止,评估孕期使用苯二氮䓬安全性的研究结果不一,且这些研究依赖自我报告或处方填充数据,而这些数据不太可能涵盖非医疗用途,因此可能会使结果产生偏差。因此,有必要对孕期非医疗用途的苯二氮䓬使用情况进行研究。
本研究使用了来自一个大型医疗系统的数据,该系统通过尿液毒理学检测对产前药物使用情况进行普遍筛查,并收集了处方填充信息。我们首先评估了非医疗用途苯二氮䓬使用(尿液毒理学检测呈阳性且过去一年无处方填充)和医疗用途苯二氮䓬使用(尿液毒理学检测呈阳性且过去一年有超过1次处方填充)的妊娠患病率。我们还评估了这些妊娠中药物使用与心理健康状况同时出现的情况。
我们的结果显示,孕早期使用苯二氮䓬的情况很少见(<1%的毒理学检测呈阳性)。然而,超过三分之一毒理学检测呈阳性的人没有处方填充(即有非医疗用途)。我们还发现,医疗用途和非医疗用途苯二氮䓬使用的妊娠中,药物使用和心理健康状况的发生率相似。
我们的结果表明,仅依赖处方数据和医疗系统的研究可能会遗漏使用苯二氮䓬的孕妇。这表明在研究和临床环境中都需要采取额外的措施和筛查(如尿液毒理学检测)。我们的研究结果还强调,需要为医疗用途和非医疗用途苯二氮䓬使用的孕妇提供额外的服务。