The Pros and Cons of Inhaled Asthma Medicine for Pregnant Women
Reported December 22, 2011
(Ivanhoe Newswire) – Inhaled glucocorticoids used to treat asthma during
pregnancy isn’t associated with an increased risk of most disease in offspring,
but it could cause endocrine and metabolic disturbances, according to this
study.
In a population-based cohort study, 65,085 mother-child pairs from the Danish
National Birth Cohort were followed up in real time from early pregnancy into
childhood. "Maternal use of inhaled glucocorticoids for asthma during pregnancy
was not related to an increased risk of most diseases in childhood, except for
endocrine and metabolic disorders, as compared to the risk in asthmatic mothers
without glucocorticoid inhalation during pregnancy," first author Marion
Tegethoff, PhD, associate faculty member in clinical psychology and psychiatry
at the University of Basel, Switzerland, was quoted as saying. "Our data are
mostly reassuring and support the use of inhaled glucocorticoids during
pregnancy."
Of 65,085 mother-child pairs with live singleton pregnancies, 61,002 had no
asthma during pregnancy (93.7%) and 4083 (6.3%) had asthma during pregnancy.
Median age at end of follow-up was 6.1 years (range: 3.6 to 8.9 years). In
statistical analyses adjusted for baseline predictors of child health, use
(versus no use) of inhaled glucocorticoids was associated with a significantly
increased risk for the first diagnosis of endocrine and metabolic disorders
(hazard ratio [HR], 1.84; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.13-2.99), but not of
diseases in any other category. Results were similar when analyses were
restricted to mother-child pairs exposed only to budesonide, the inhaled
glucocorticoid used by the majority of women (79.9%) in the study.
"This is the first comprehensive study of potential effects of glucocorticoid
inhalation during pregnancy on the health of offspring, covering a wide spectrum
of pediatric diseases," last author Gunther Meinlschmidt, PhD, associate faculty
member in clinical psychology and epidemiology at the University of Basel,
Switzerland, was quoted as saying. "While our results support the use of these
widely used asthma treatments during pregnancy, their effect on endocrine and
metabolic disturbances during childhood merits further study."
There were some limitations to the study, including a lack of data on daily
inhalation doses, use of self-report of maternal asthma and the study's focus on
glucocorticoid inhalation rather than other active ingredients or
glucocorticoids administered by other routes.
"Our data have both clinical and public health implications," the authors were
quoted as saying, "given that asthma is common in pregnant women and inhaled
glucocorticoids are the recommended treatment."
SOURCE: American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, December
2011