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Prescription drug use among pregnant women in Opioid Maintenance Treatment

Aim

This study describes the use of prescribed drugs among women in Opioid Maintenance Treatment (OMT) prior to and during pregnancy.

Design

This cohort study was based on data from two nationwide databases: the Medical Birth Registry of Norway and the Norwegian Prescription Database.

Setting

Norway, 2004-2010.

Participants

OMT drugs were dispensed to 138 women with 159 pregnancies.

Measurements

All prescription drugs dispensed to women in OMT three months prior to and during pregnancy were studied. Amounts of benzodiazepines, z-hypnotics and opioid analgesics dispensed during pregnancy were studied and bivariate analysis were used to study neonatal outcomes of OMT pregnancies with and without such co-medication.

Findings

The prevalence of prescription drug use by pregnant OMT women was high both during the three months period prior to (69%) and during (81%) pregnancy. The proportion of pregnant women who were dispensed antiinfectives (48%) and/or drugs acting on the nervous system (45%) during any time in pregnancy was especially high. In 21, 15 and 13 % of the pregnancies the women were dispensed benzodiazepine anxiolytics, opioid analgesics or benzodiazepine hypnotics respectively. Only 5% of the OMT women were dispensed antidepressants. Malformations were significantly more common among children born to mothers in OMT that received co-medication with opioids, benzodiazepines or z-hypnotics.

Conclusions

A higher proportion of women in Opioid Maintenance Treatment in Norway use prescription drugs prior to and during pregnancy than pregnant women in the general population. Co-medication with drugs with abuse potential may increase the risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes and this need to be further addressed.

Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 09/05/2012 | Link to this post on IFP |
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