| Literature DB >> 18482454 |
Patricia Nguyen1, Alejandro Nava-Ocampo, Amalia Levy, Deborah L O'Connor, Tom R Einarson, Anna Taddio, Gideon Koren.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gastrointestinal irritability can deter pregnant women from starting or continuing prenatal multivitamin supplementation. In a previous study, suboptimal tolerability was observed among pregnant women taking a large tablet (18 mm x 8 mm x 8 mm) multivitamin with high elemental iron content (60 mg as ferrous fumarate). The objective of the present study was to compare rates of adherence and reported adverse events among pregnant women who were randomized to commence supplementation with a small-tablet prenatal multivitamin, containing either low or high iron content.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18482454 PMCID: PMC2405769 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2393-8-17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Figure 1Enrolled subjects and data collected. Total no. of subjects who completed the study, n = 140. Total no. of subjects with (complete or partial) data collected for study, n = 158.
Subject characteristics at time of enrolment
| 60 mg iron group n = 75 | 35 mg iron group n = 92 | Total N = 167 | |
| a) Had not started multivitamin in current pregnancy | 27 (36%) | 28 (30%) | 55 (33%) |
| b) Had discontinued multivitamin in current pregnancy | 48 (64%) | 64 (70%) | 112 (67%) |
| Nausea and/or vomiting (NVP) | 62 (83%) | 68 (74%) | 130 (78%) |
| Tablet sizeψ, swallowing difficulties, other tablet properties (i.e. taste, smell) | 33 (44%) | 20 (22%) | 53 (32%) |
| Constipationβ | 4 (5%) | 14 (15%) | 18 (11%) |
| Abdominal pain, GI irritability, diarrhea, heartburn, reflux | 10 (13%) | 13 (14%) | 23 (14%) |
| GI medical condition (i.e. IBS, Crohn's disease) | 2 (3%) | 2 (2%) | 4 (2%) |
| Doctor's advice, not supplement taker, or lacked information | 5 (7%) | 6 (7%) | 11 (7%) |
| 30 ± 5 | 31 ± 5 | 31 ± 5 | |
| First pregnancy | 23 (31%) | 20 (22%) | 43 (26%) |
| Second or higher pregnancy | 52 (69%) | 72 (78%) | 124 (74%) |
| Multivitamin intake in a previous pregnancy* | 45/52 (87%) | 59/72 (82%) | 104/124 (84%) |
| Discontinued multivitamin in a previous pregnancy* | 26/45 (58%) | 28/59 (47%) | 54/104 (52%) |
*Data missing for 1 subject.
ψ For the subjects who reported issues with tablet size as the reason for non-adherence with previous multivitamins, 22/33 (66%) in the '60 mg' group and 13/20 (65%) in the '35 mg' group still commenced supplementation with the assigned multivitamins.
β For the subjects who reported constipation as the reason for non-adherence with previous multivitamins, 2/4 (50%) in the '60 mg' group and 12/14 (86%) in the '35 mg' group still commenced supplementation with the assigned multivitamins.
Rates of adherence between 2 prenatal multivitamin groups, based on subjects who completed the studyβ
| Prenatal multivitamin groups, differing in iron content | |||
| 35 mg iron group (n = 78) | 60 mg iron group (n = 62) | p-value (chi-squared test) | |
| No. who started taking assigned prenatal multivitamin | 57 (73%) | 47 (76%) | 0.86 |
| Proportion who were ≥ 80% adherent†. | 21/57 (37%) | 18/47 (38%) | 0.96 |
| Proportion who were ≥ 50% adherent¶. | 32/57 (56%) | 28/47 (60%) | 0.88 |
β No significant difference was detected when partial data from subjects who did not complete the study were included.
† Based on at least 80% pill intake.
¶ Based on at least 50% pill intake
Rates of adherence between 2 prenatal multivitamin groups, among subjects with nausea and vomiting of pregnancy (NVP) and study completionβ
| Prenatal multivitamin groups, differing in iron content | |||
| 35 mg iron group (n = 78) | 60 mg iron group (n = 62) | p-value (chi-squared test) | |
| No. of subjects with NVP (at time of enrolment) | 67 (86%) | 56 (90%) | 0.59 |
| Proportion who started taking assigned prenatal multivitamin | 49/67 (73%) | 44/56 (79%) | 0.63 |
| Proportion who were ≥ 80% adherent.ψ | 17/49 (35%) | 18/44 (41%) | 0.69 |
βNo significant difference was detected when partial data from subjects who did not complete the study were included.
ψ Based on at least 80% pill intake
Figure 2Rates of adherence between 2 prenatal multivitamin groups, represented as Kaplan-Meier survival curves and based on the proportion of subjects with standard adherence (80% or greater pill intake), once supplementation commenced. (Black solid line) 35 mg iron group, n = 57. (Black broken line) 60 mg iron group, n = 47.
Figure 3Rates of adherence between 2 prenatal multivitamin groups, represented as Kaplan-Meier survival curves and based on the proportion of subjects who commenced and continued supplementation with assigned multivitamin (at any percentage of pill intake). (Black solid line) 35 mg iron group, n = 57. (Black broken line) 60 mg iron group, n = 47.
Rates of reported adverse events among pregnant women who commenced supplementation with assigned multivitamin
| Adverse Events | 35 mg iron group (n = 57*) | 60 mg iron group (n = 47*) |
| No. subjects (%) who reported any adverse event(s) | 27 (47%) | 21 (45%) |
| Nausea and/or vomiting(NVP) | 12 (21%) | 9 (19%) |
| Constipation | 13/57 (23%) | 10/47 (21%) |
| Heartburn/Acid reflux | 4/57 (7%) | 1/47 (2%) |
| Diarrhea | 1/57 (2%) | 3/47 (6%) |
| Abdominal pain/cramps | 5/57 (9%) | 5/47 (11%) |
| Swallowing difficulties with tablet size | 2/57 (4%) | None |
*Only subjects who completed the study, with no significant difference detected when partial data from subjects who did not complete the study were included.