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Drug%20Therapy%20in%20the%20Pregnant%20Dental%20Patient

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Metronidazole. Mutagenic in bacteria and carcinogenic in animals ... Metronidazole (Am J Obstet Gynecol ... Metronidazole. Use during lactation controversial ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Drug%20Therapy%20in%20the%20Pregnant%20Dental%20Patient


1
Drug Therapy in the Pregnant Dental Patient
  • Doreen Matsui MD, FRCPC
  • Associate Professor, Department of Paediatrics
  • Childrens Hospital of Western Ontario

2
Objectives
  • To review general principles regarding drugs in
    pregnancy
  • To describe effects of drugs commonly used in
    dentistry
  • To briefly overview use of drugs during
    breastfeeding

3
Drug Use in Pregnancy(Larimore WL et al. Prim
Care 20002735-53)
  • 1991 WHO International Survey of Drug Utilization
    in Pregnancy
  • 86 of women took medication during pregnancy
  • Average of 2.9 prescriptions
  • Despite this high rate of medication intake, most
    drugs are not labeled for use during pregnancy

4
Inadvertent Exposure
  • 1/2 of pregnancies unplanned
  • Teratogenic potential should be considered and
    explained to women of childbearing age at time
    drug is prescribed
  • lt50 of women know they are pregnant by 4th week
    and 20 still dont know by 8th week

5
Drug Use in Pregnancy(Van Trigt AM et al. Pharm
World Sci 199416254-9)
  • Women interviewed within 2 weeks after delivery
  • ? 40 had had one or more questions about drugs
    during their pregnancy
  • Similar proportion said that during pregnancy
    important to consult a health professional before
    using any medication
  • Safety was issue that raised the most questions

6
Compliance
  • Pregnant women tend to comply less than optimally
    with drug therapy
  • Misinformation
  • 39 of women reported noncompliance predominantly
    due to hesitation to use drugs during pregnancy
    (Van Trigt AM et al. Pharm World
    Sci199416254-9)

7
Perception of Teratogenic Risk(Am J Obstet
Gynecol 19891601190-4)
  • Women exposed to nonteratogens assigned a risk of
    24 for major malformations
  • Risk in general population 5.6
  • May be important factor in decision to terminate
    pregnancy

8
Perception of Teratogenic Risk(Sanz E et al.
Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol 200195127-31)
  • Perception of risk related to medication used in
    pregnancy higher than the recognized risk in a
    group of 15 GPs, 10 gynaecologists, 106
    pre-clinical medical students, 150 medical
    students in clinical training, 81 pregnant women
    and 63 non-pregnant women

9
General Considerations
  • Almost all drugs cross the placenta to some
    extent
  • Majority of drugs have not been associated with
    adverse effects when taken during pregnancy
  • Weigh therapeutic benefits of drug to mother
    against its risk potential to developing fetus

10
Adverse Effects
  • Spontaneous abortion
  • Fetal growth retardation
  • Teratogenicity
  • Direct drug toxicity
  • Neonatal drug withdrawal
  • Long term effects on neurobehavioral development
  • Carcinogenesis

11
Teratogenic Risk(Lo et al. Obstet Gynecol
2002100465-73)
  • Standard clinical teratology databases
  • 485 drugs approved by FDA 1980 - 2000
  • Treatment with only small fraction (2.4) has
    been associated with substantial teratogenic risk
  • Took on average 6.0 4.1 years after approval to
    determine risk

12
Known Teratogens
  • Alcohol (Ethanol)
  • Carbamazepine
  • Cytotoxic chemotherapy
  • DES
  • Isotretinoin and Etretinate
  • Lithium
  • Methimazole
  • Misoprostol
  • Phenytoin
  • Thalidomide
  • Trimethoprim
  • Valproic Acid
  • Warfarin

13
Baseline Risk
  • Risk of major malformation (cosmetic or
    functional significance) 3 at birth
  • Assessment of magnitude of increase in risk above
    baseline is important
  • Need to put risk in perspective

14
Important Factors
  • Timing of exposure (sensitive period)
  • All-or-none period
  • Organogenesis
  • Avoid drug administration, if at all possible
    during 1st trimester
  • Brain development
  • Dose of drug (threshold, dose-response)
  • Genetic susceptibility

15
Associated Factors
  • Role of underlying maternal disease
  • Other exposures such as alcohol and cigarette
    smoking

16
General Recommendations
  • Minimize use of medications to those which are
    necessary and for shortest duration possible
  • Effective drugs that have been in use for long
    periods preferable to newer alternatives

17
Evaluating Risk - Drug Studies
  • Manufacturer almost never tests product in
    pregnant women prior to marketing
  • Evidence from large clinical trials does not
    exist
  • Reproductive toxicology studies in animals -
    extrapolation?

18
Animals vs Humans
  • 40-50 chemical and physical agents probably human
    developmental toxicants
  • gt1200 produce developmental defects in
    experimental animals
  • gt80 of agents known to produce defects in humans
    also cause defects in at least one test animal

19
CPS
  • Majority of drugs not labeled for use during
    pregnancy
  • Safety of Drug X in pregnancy has not been
    established. Drug X should not be used during
    pregnancy unless the potential benefit to the
    patient outweighs the possible risk to the fetus.

20
FDA Classification
  • X, D, C, B, A
  • Little correlation with risk

21
Sources of Information
  • Reference Textbooks
  • Drugs in Pregnancy and Lactation (Briggs)
  • Maternal-Fetal Toxicology (Koren)
  • Computer Databases
  • Reprotox
  • TERIS
  • Teratogen Information Services
  • Motherisk Program
  • FRAME Program

22
The Pregnant Dental Patient
  • Elective vs urgent
  • 2nd trimester
  • Eliminate source of infection or pain
  • Usually short-term drug therapy

23
Penicillins
  • Collaborative Perinatal Project
  • Frequency of congenital anomalies no greater than
    expected among children of 4,356 women treated
    with penicillin (or one of its derivatives)
    during 1st 4 lunar months of pregnancy

24
Penicillins and Cephalosporins
  • Amoxicillin and cephalosporins also considered
    safe to use during pregnancy
  • No increased risk of malformations with
    amoxicillin/clavulanic acid (Clavulin) in 2
    studies (Br J Clin Pharmacol 200458298-302 and
    Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol 200197188-92)

25
Erythromycin
  • Surveillance study of Michigan Medicaid
    recipients (1985-1992)
  • No association between drug and congenital
    malformations in 6,972 newborns exposed during
    1st trimester
  • Avoid estolate form (cholestatic hepatitis)
  • Less but reassuring data with clarithromycin and
    azithromycin

26
Clindamycin(Scand J Infect Dis 200032579-80)
  • Hungarian Case-Control Surveillance of Congenital
    Abnormalities (1980-1996)
  • OR (95 CI) for clindamycin 1.2 (0.4-3.8) and for
    lincomycin 1.3 (0.3-5.1)
  • Limited numbers

27
Metronidazole
  • Mutagenic in bacteria and carcinogenic in animals
  • Small number of reports raised suspicion of
    teratogenic effect

28
Metronidazole(Am J Obstet Gynecol 1995172525-9)
  • Outcome of interest occurrence of birth defects
    in live-born infants
  • Overall weighted OR during the 1st trimester
    calculated by meta-analysis of 7 studies was 0.93
    (95 CI 0.73-1.18)

29
Fluoroquinolones(Antimicrob Agents Chemother
1998421336-9)
  • Arthropathy in weight-bearing joints of animals
  • 200 women exposed to fluoroquinolones during
    pregnancy
  • Rates of major malformations did not differ
    between groups exposed to quinolones during 1st
    trimester (2.2) and control group (2.6)
  • Gross motor milestones did not differ between
    children in 2 groups

30
Tetracycline
  • Main risk is yellow-brown discoloration of teeth
  • Risk only later than 4-5 months gestation when
    deciduous teeth begin to calcify
  • No staining from doxycycline documented
  • Effects on bone minimal

31
Local Anesthetics - Lidocaine
  • Considered relatively safe for use during
    pregnancy

32
Epinephrine
  • Potential to compromise uterine blood flow
  • Studies have failed to demonstrate adverse fetal
    effects
  • Low doses used in dentistry
  • Avoid inadvertent intravascular injection

33
Acetaminophen
  • Analgesic of choice
  • Occasional use at therapeutic doses
  • Chronic use or overdose

34
NSAIDS (including Aspirin)
  • Increased risk of miscarriage? (BMJ
    2001322266-70)
  • Gastroschisis (abdominal wall defect) ???
  • Avoid use during late pregnancy (3rd trimester)
  • ? Bleeding
  • Inhibition of prostaglandin synthesis
  • Prolonged labour
  • Constriction of ductus arteriosus

35
New COX-2 Inhibitors(Am J Physiol Regul Integr
Comp Physiol 2000278R1496-505)
  • Studies in fetal lambs demonstrated
  • Celecoxib constricted isolated ductus in vitro
  • Celecoxib produced both an increase in pressure
    gradient and resistance across the ductus in vivo

36
Narcotics(Codeine, Oxycodone, etc.)
  • Dont appear to ? risk of birth defects
  • Low dose short-term regimens acceptable
  • Respiratory depression
  • Neonatal withdrawal

37
Codeine
  • Unlikely to pose substantial teratogenic risk but
    data insufficient to state no risk (TERIS, 2002)
  • Associations between 1st trimester use and
    congenital anomalies in case-control studies
    although others have not confirmed
  • Absence of consistent pattern and criticisms of
    possible bias in data make it unjustified to
    consider codeine as causative of these
    malformations

38
Nitrous Oxide (N2O) with O2
  • Use during pregnancy somewhat controversial
  • Inhibits methionine synthetase which can affect
    DNA synthesis
  • Teratogenic in animals
  • Single brief maternal exposure during pregnancy
    unlikely to pose a substantial teratogenic risk
  • Minimize prolonged use (lt 30 minutes, at least
    50 O2)

39
Occupational Exposure to N2O
  • ? risk of spontaneous abortion?
  • Importance of scavenging equipment

40
Benzodiazepines(BMJ 1998317839-43)
  • Meta-analysis
  • Cohort studies showed no association between
    fetal exposure to BZDs and risk for major
    malformations or oral cleft
  • Case-control studies showed that risk for major
    malformations or oral cleft alone was increased
  • Use around delivery - floppy infant

41
Radiation
  • In most cases of diagnostic x-rays the fetal
    radiation exposure is much below the threshold
    dose of 5 to 10 rad

42
Average Fetal Exposure Dose (mrad)
  • Fetal exposure dose from a full mouth series (18
    films) or panoramic radiograph is lt1/1000 value
    of concern
  • 40-fold lt naturally occurring background
    radiation

43
Antepartum Dental Radiography and Infant Low
Birth Weight(JAMA 20042911987-93)
  • Population-based case-control study
  • Dental utilization data from Washington Dental
    Service
  • Vital record birth certificates from Washington
    state

44
Antepartum Dental Radiography and Infant Low
Birth Weight(JAMA 20042911987-93)
  • When thyroid radiation dose was gt0.4 mGy (40
    mrad), adjusted OR for a term low birth weight
    infant was 3.61 (95 CI 1.46-8.92) when compared
    with women with no known dental radiograph

Dose to thyroid of dental radiograph 0.08 mGy
45
Antepartum Dental Radiography and Infant Low
Birth Weight(JAMA 20042911987-93)
  • Weaknesses of study including chance finding and
    missing data
  • Criticisms (JAMA 20042921019-21)
  • Confounding factors
  • Dental pathology
  • Radiation dose was related to maternal smoking
    and late prenatal care
  • Large of statistical tests (Type 1 error)
  • Overestimation of radiation doses

46
American Dental Association
  • Abdominal exposure during dental radiography is
    negligible
  • Recommend that pregnant women postpone elective
    dental x-rays until after delivery however,
    there are times when an x-ray may be required
    during pregnancy to help diagnose and treat oral
    disease (thyroid collar and apron)

47
Drugs and Pregnancy - Summary
  • List of drugs which have been associated with
    adverse effects when taken during pregnancy is
    relatively short
  • Teratogenic potential should be explained to
    women of childbearing age at time drug is
    prescribed
  • Lack of information but important to avoid
    misinformation
  • Importance of baseline risk

48
What is Baby Drinking?Drugs and the Nursing
Mother
49
Risk-Benefit Ratio
  • Benefits of continuing breastfeeding substantial
  • Convincing reason to justify cessation of
    breastfeeding required

50
Clinical Implications
  • Majority of drugs cross from maternal plasma into
    breast milk
  • Most medications found in very small amounts in
    breast milk (lt1 of maternal dose)
  • Risk of adverse effects in nursing infants is
    negligible for most drugs

51
Clinical Implications
  • Reluctance to encourage continuation of
    breastfeeding
  • Pharmacological action of drug suggests that a
    toxic effect may occur
  • Adverse effects have previously been noted in
    nursing infants

52
Clinical Implications
  • Experience with direct use of drug in infants for
    therapy may provide reassurance
  • Infants age (lt 6 months), clinical status and
    frequency of feeding may be important

53
Clinical Implications- Risk Assessment
  • Arbitrarily define as safe a value of lt10 of the
    therapeutic dose for infants (or the adult dose
    standardized by weight)

54
Sources of Information
  • Peer-reviewed literature
  • Textbooks
  • Committee on Drugs (AAP)
  • Computer Databases
  • Teratogen Information Services
  • FRAME Program (London)
  • Motherisk Program (Toronto)

55
Metronidazole
  • Use during lactation controversial
  • Excreted into breast milk in relatively large
    amounts
  • Concern expressed with respect to possible
    mutagenic effects
  • No reports of adverse effects in nursing infants
  • In conventional doses compatible with
    breastfeeding
  • If taken in single large dose breastfeeding may
    be temporarily withheld for 12 to 24 hours

56
Codeine(Lancet 2006368704)
  • Full term healthy male infant
  • Intermittent difficulty breastfeeding and
    lethargy starting Day 7 and died Day 13
  • Blood morphine concentration very high

57
Codeine(Lancet 2006368704)
  • Mother
  • Taking acetaminophen/codeine preparation
  • ? dose due to somnolence and constipation
  • Morphine of stored milk was very high
  • Ultra-rapid metabolizer
  • Picture consistent with opioid toxicity
  • Careful follow-up of breastfeeding mothers using
    codeine and their infants (somnolence, poor
    feeding, etc.)

58
Benzodiazepines
  • Milk levels of benzodiazepines not excessive but
    rarely sedation has been reported in breastfed
    infants
  • If sedative required, shorter half-life drugs
    such as lorazepam and midazolam preferred
  • Long term exposure not recommended

59
Drugs and Breastfeeding - Summary
  • Most medications found in very small amounts in
    breast milk
  • Risk of adverse effects in nursing infants is
    negligible for most drugs
  • Consequences of misinformation (medication
    noncompliance, breastfeeding cessation) ? NB to
    consult appropriate available sources
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