Risks of miscarriage and inadvertent exposure to artemisinin derivatives in the first trimester of pregnancy: A prospective cohort study in western Kenya: A prospective cohort study in western Kenya

  • Stephanie Dellicour
  • , Meghna Desai
  • , George Aol
  • , Martina Oneko
  • , Peter Ouma
  • , Godfrey Bigogo
  • , Deron C. Burton
  • , Robert F. Breiman
  • , Mary J. Hamel
  • , Laurence Slutsker
  • , Daniel Feikin
  • , Simon Kariuki
  • , Frank Odhiambo
  • , Jayesh Pandit
  • , Kayla F. Laserson
  • , Greg Calip
  • , Andy Stergachis
  • , Feiko Ter Kuile

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

25 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: The artemisinin anti-malarials are widely deployed as artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT). However, they are not recommended for uncomplicated malaria during the first trimester because safety data from humans are scarce. Methods: This was a prospective cohort study of women of child-bearing age carried out in 2011-2013, evaluating the relationship between inadvertent ACT exposure during first trimester and miscarriage. Community-based surveillance was used to identify 1134 early pregnancies. Cox proportional hazard models with left truncation were used. Results: The risk of miscarriage among pregnancies exposed to ACT (confirmed + unconfirmed) in the first trimester, or during the embryo-sensitive period (≥6 to <13 weeks gestation) was higher than among pregnancies unexposed to anti-malarials in the first trimester: hazard ratio (HR) = 1.70, 95 % CI (1.08-2.68) and HR = 1.61 (0.96-2.70). For confirmed ACT-exposures (primary analysis) the corresponding values were: HR = 1.24 (0.56-2.74) and HR = 0.73 (0.19-2.82) relative to unexposed women, and HR = 0.99 (0.12-8.33) and HR = 0.32 (0.03-3.61) relative to quinine exposure, but the numbers of quinine exposures were very small. Conclusion: ACT exposure in early pregnancy was more common than quinine exposure. Confirmed inadvertent artemisinin exposure during the potential embryo-sensitive period was not associated with increased risk of miscarriage. Confirmatory studies are needed to rule out a smaller than three-fold increase in risk.
Original languageEnglish
Article number461
JournalMalaria Journal
Volume14
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 18 Nov 2015

Keywords

  • Anti-malarials
  • Drug safety in pregnancy
  • Miscarriage
  • Pharmacovigilance
  • Teratogenicity

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