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Medical News

HIV Drug Combo May Be Risky in Early Pregnancy

December 28, 2001

HIV-infected women who take certain combinations of medications in their first trimester of pregnancy may increase the risk of having a child with birth defects, a small study suggests. In particular, women who took a drug to ward off Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) in combination with antiretroviral drugs early in pregnancy were more likely to have a baby with birth defects. However, taking either type of drug alone in early pregnancy did not seem to be a problem.

In the study, Dr. Graham Taylor from Imperial College in London and colleagues evaluated the risk of birth defects in infants of 195 HIV-infected mothers. Overall, nine children (4.6 percent) were born with abnormalities, the authors report. None of the 34 infants exposed to either antiretroviral drugs alone or PCP-preventing drugs alone during the first trimester had birth defects. In contrast, three of 13 (23.1 percent) children exposed to both therapies had birth defects, the report indicates. "Although the numbers are small, they had a sevenfold increased risk of birth defects compared with infants not exposed to any drugs during the first trimester," the authors wrote.

"These findings, if confirmed, have important implications for preconceptual counseling and the therapeutic choices of women of childbearing age," the authors concluded. Taylor said that physicians should take care "to regularly review the needs of therapy before women become pregnant and to ensure that women with HIV who wish to become pregnant, especially those who need to take PCP prophylaxis, take folic acid supplements." Drugs used to combat PCP are known as folate antagonists, meaning they deplete folate in the body. Folic acid has been found to help prevent birth defects when taken by women before and during early pregnancy. The findings are reported in the December issue of the journal Sexually Transmitted Infections (2001; 77: 441-443).

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Adapted from:
Reuters Health
12.26.01

  
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This article was provided by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is a part of the publication CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update.
 

 

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