Adverse Events in Pregnant Patients Treated with Coronavirus Disease 2019 Therapeutics.

IF 2.5 4区 医学 Q3 TOXICOLOGY Journal of Medical Toxicology Pub Date : 2023-10-01 Epub Date: 2023-08-15 DOI:10.1007/s13181-023-00961-3
Mark Simon, Jennie Buchanan, Jonathan Schimmel, Jeffrey Brent, Keith Burkhart, Paul Wax, Natalie Taylor, Kim Aldy
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Abstract

Background: Pregnant patients are at high risk of maternal and fetal complications from Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) infections. The COVID-19 pandemic prompted a surge in the development and repurposing of therapies for the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Evidence is sparse on the efficacy and safety of these therapies in pregnant patients. Our objective was to describe adverse events (AEs) to COVID-19 therapeutics in pregnant patients.

Methods: This was a case series of AEs reported to the FDA ACMT COVID-19 ToxIC (FACT) Pharmacovigilance Project between November 23, 2020, and June 28, 2022. FACT is an ongoing toxicosurveillance project at 17 sites to proactively identify and report AEs associated with COVID-19 therapeutics. Abstracted information includes demographics, case narratives, exposure details, clinical information, pregnancy details, treatments, and outcomes.

Results: Forty-six COVID-19-positive pregnant patients who developed AEs following COVID-19 therapeutics were reported to the FACT Pharmacovigilance Project over 19 months. The most reported medications were remdesivir in 22 patients (47.8%) and casirivimab/imdevimab in 8 patients (17.4%). Four patients (8.7%) had life-threatening clinical manifestation, and 16 patients (34.8%) required intervention to prevent permanent damage. The most common maternal and fetal events were elevated serum alanine aminotransferase (26.1%) and non-reassuring fetal heart patterns (20.0%), respectively.

Conclusions: This case series reports AEs of elevated serum alanine aminotransferase, maternal bradycardia, maternal hypothermia, non-reassuring fetal heart patterns, and emergent or unplanned cesarean sections following administration of several COVID-19 therapeutics. This study was not designed to definitely identify causation, and further study is needed to evaluate the causal role of these therapeutics in AEs affecting pregnant COVID-19 patients.

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2019冠状病毒病治疗孕妇的不良事件。
背景:妊娠患者因2019冠状病毒病(新冠肺炎)感染而发生孕产妇和胎儿并发症的风险很高。新冠肺炎大流行促使针对SARS-CoV-2病毒的疗法的开发和重新利用激增。关于这些疗法对孕妇的疗效和安全性的证据很少。我们的目的是描述妊娠患者对新冠肺炎治疗的不良事件(AE)。方法:这是2020年11月23日至2022年6月28日期间向FDA ACMT新冠肺炎毒性(FACT)药物警戒项目报告的一系列AE病例。FACT是一个正在17个地点进行的毒性监测项目,旨在主动识别和报告与新冠肺炎治疗相关的不良事件。摘要信息包括人口统计、病例描述、暴露细节、临床信息、妊娠细节、治疗和结果。结果:在19个月内,有46名新冠肺炎阳性妊娠患者在接受新冠肺炎治疗后出现不良反应,报告给了FACT药物警戒项目。报告最多的药物是22名患者(47.8%)的瑞德西韦和8名患者(17.4%)的casirivimab/imdevimab。4名患者(8.7%)有危及生命的临床表现,16名患者(34.8%)需要干预以防止永久性损伤。最常见的母体和胎儿事件分别是血清丙氨酸氨基转移酶升高(26.1%)和不令人放心的胎儿心脏模式(20.0%)。结论:该病例系列报告了服用几种新冠肺炎治疗后血清丙氨酸氨基转移酶升高、母亲心动过缓、母亲体温过低、胎儿心脏模式不稳定以及紧急或计划外剖宫产的不良事件。本研究并非旨在明确确定因果关系,还需要进一步研究来评估这些疗法在影响妊娠新冠肺炎患者的AE中的因果作用。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
10.30%
发文量
46
期刊介绍: Journal of Medical Toxicology (JMT) is a peer-reviewed medical journal dedicated to advances in clinical toxicology, focusing on the diagnosis, management, and prevention of poisoning and other adverse health effects resulting from medications, chemicals, occupational and environmental substances, and biological hazards. As the official journal of the American College of Medical Toxicology (ACMT), JMT is managed by an editorial board of clinicians as well as scientists and thus publishes research that is relevant to medical toxicologists, emergency physicians, critical care specialists, pediatricians, pre-hospital providers, occupational physicians, substance abuse experts, veterinary toxicologists, and policy makers.       JMT articles generate considerable interest in the lay media, with 2016 JMT articles cited by various social media sites, the Boston Globe, and the Washington Post among others.     For questions or comments about the journal, please contact jmtinfo@acmt.net.    For questions or comments about the journal, please contact jmtinfo@acmt.net.
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