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Polypharmacy in polymorbid pregnancies and the risk of congenital malformations - a systematic review.

Mette Østergaard ThunboJulie Hauer VendelboTabia VolqvartzDaniel R WitteAgnete LarsenLars Henning Pedersen
Published in: Basic & clinical pharmacology & toxicology (2021)
With an increased prevalence of concurrent morbidities during pregnancy, polypharmacy has become increasingly common in pregnant women. The risks associated with polypharmacy may exceed those of individual medication because of drug-drug interactions. This systematic review aims to evaluate the risk of congenital malformations in polymorbid pregnancies exposed to first trimester polypharmacy. PubMed, Embase, and Scopus were searched to identify original human studies with first trimester polypharmacy due to polymorbidity as the exposure and congenital malformations as the outcome. After screening of 4,034 identified records, seven studies fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Four of the seven studies reported an increased risk of congenital malformations compared to unexposed or monotherapy, odds ratios ranging from 1.1 to >10.0. Particularly, short-term anti-infective treatment combined with other drugs and P-glycoprotein substrates were associated with increased malformation risks. In conclusion, knowledge is limited on risks associated with first trimester polypharmacy due to polymorbidity with the underlying evidence of low quantity and quality. Therefore, an increased focus on pharmacovigilance to enable safe drug use in early pregnancy is needed. Large-scale register-based studies and better knowledge of placental biology are needed to support the clinical management of polymorbid pregnancies that require polypharmacy.
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