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Maternal exposure to hydroxychloroquine and birth defects. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Hydroxychloroquine, commonly used for rheumatic diseases and considered safe in pregnancy, is being studied as a treatment for COVID-19, but data on its birth defect risks is limited.
  • A study analyzed the health and medication reports of pregnant women who used hydroxychloroquine and their children's birth outcomes, revealing a very small percentage of reported birth defects among these women.
  • The findings did not show a clear pattern of birth defects linked to hydroxychloroquine, indicating no significant evidence of increased risk; however, due to the small number of cases, results should be interpreted with caution.

Article Abstract

Background: Hydroxychloroquine is a treatment for rheumatic disease and considered safe during pregnancy. Interest in hydroxychloroquine has increased as it is being examined as a potential treatment and prophylaxis for coronavirus disease 2019. Data on the risks of specific birth defects associated with hydroxychloroquine use are sparse.

Methods: Using data from two case-control studies (National Birth Defects Prevention Study and Slone Epidemiology Center Birth Defects Study), we described women who reported hydroxychloroquine use in pregnancy and the presence of specific major birth defects in their offspring. Cases had at least one major birth defect and controls were live-born healthy infants. Women self-reported medication use information in the few months before pregnancy through delivery.

Results: In total, 0.06% (19/31,468) of case and 0.04% (5/11,614) of control mothers in National Birth Defects Prevention Study, and 0.04% (11/29,838) of case and 0.05% (7/12,868) of control mothers in Birth Defects Study reported hydroxychloroquine use. Hydroxychloroquine users had complicated medical histories and frequent medication use for a variety of conditions. The observed birth defects among women taking hydroxychloroquine were varied and included nine oral cleft cases; the elevated observed:expected ratios for specific oral cleft phenotypes and for oral clefts overall had 95% confidence intervals that included 1.0.

Conclusion: While teratogens typically produce a specific pattern of birth defects, the observed birth defects among the hydroxychloroquine-exposed women did not present a clear pattern, suggesting no meaningful evidence for the risk of specific birth defects. The number of exposed cases is small; results should be interpreted cautiously.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8426694PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bdr2.1943DOI Listing

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