| Literature DB >> 35881237 |
Anna L David1,2, Homa Ahmadzia3, Richard Ashcroft4, Christina Bucci-Rechtweg5, Rebecca N Spencer6,7, Steve Thornton8.
Abstract
The exclusion of pregnant populations, women of reproductive age, and the fetus from clinical trials of therapeutics is a major global public health issue. It is also a problem of inequity in medicines development, as pregnancy is a protected characteristic. The current regulatory requirements for drugs in pregnancy are being analyzed by a number of agencies worldwide. There has been considerable investment in developing expertise in pregnancy clinical trials (for the pregnant person and the fetus) such as the Obstetric-Fetal Pharmacology Research Centers funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. Progress has also been made in how to define and grade clinical trial safety in pregnant women, the fetus, and neonate. Innovative methods to model human pregnancy physiology and pharmacology using computer simulations are also gaining interest. Novel ways to assess fetal well-being and placental function using magnetic resonance imaging, computerized cardiotocography, serum circulating fetoplacental proteins, and mRNA may permit better assessment of the safety and efficacy of interventions in the mother and fetus. The core outcomes in women's and newborn health initiative is facilitating the consistent reporting of data from pregnancy trials. Electronic medical records integrated with pharmacy services should improve the strength of pharmacoepidemiologic and pharmacovigilance studies. Incentives such as investigational plans and orphan disease designation have been taken up for obstetric, fetal, and neonatal diseases. This review describes the progress that is being made to better understand the extent of the problem and to develop applicable solutions.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse event; Fetus; Pregnancy clinical trial; Safety; Therapeutics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35881237 PMCID: PMC9315086 DOI: 10.1007/s43441-022-00433-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Innov Regul Sci ISSN: 2168-4790 Impact factor: 1.337
MFAET v1.0.
| Maternal AEs | Fetal AEs |
|---|---|
| Hemorrhage in pregnancy | Hemorrhage in pregnancy |
| Preterm premature rupture of membranes | Preterm premature rupture of membranes |
| Chorioamnionitis | Chorioamnionitis |
| Anemia of pregnancy | Anemia of pregnancy |
| Gestational hypertension | Fetal fluid collectiona |
| Pre-eclampsia | Fetal bradycardia: non-labora |
| Eclampsia | Fetal tachyarrhythmiaa |
| Premature labor | Cardiac function abnormalitiesa |
| Puerperal infection | Fetal brain scan abnormala |
| Postpartum hemorrhage (primary) | Fetal gastrointestinal tract imaging abnormala |
| Retained placenta or membranes | Fetal musculoskeletal imaging abnormala |
| Amniotic fluid embolism | Fetal renal imaging abnormala |
| Fetal movement disordersa | |
| Fetal neoplasma | |
| Fetal structural abnormalities: not otherwise classifieda | |
| Abnormal fetal growtha | |
| Fetal intraoperative injurya | |
| Procedural hemorrhagea | |
| Post-procedural hemorrhagea |
The maternal and fetal AE terms for which definitions and severity grading criteria were developed [49]
aAdded to the Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities terms list
Stakeholder efforts to advance research in pregnant and lactating populations
| Obstetric-Fetal Pharmacology Research Centers (OPRC) Network | Project | Obstetric-Fetal Pharmacology Research Centers (OPRC) Network|NICHD—Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (nih.gov) |
|---|---|---|
| U.S. Health and Human Services (HHS) task force on research specific to pregnant women and lactating women (PRGLAC) | PRGLAC Report to the HHS Secretary and Congress, Implementation plan, | • Identified gaps in knowledge and research related to pregnant and lactating women • Provided 15 recommendations to improve therapeutic development for pregnant and lactating women • Provided an interrelated set of steps for each of the 15 recommendations |
| Innovative medicines initiative (IMI) conception | Project | • 8 work packages • To establish a system to efficiently, systematically, and ethically generate reliable evidence-based information on drug use in pregnant and lactating women • To generate, catalog, link, collect and analyze data from pharmacovigilance, modeling, healthcare, and breast milk samples |
| U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) | Workshop New guidance documents | • Evaluation of the safety of drugs and biological products used during lactation, • Pregnant women: scientific and ethical considerations for inclusion in clinical trials, • • Postapproval pregnancy safety studies, • • Clinical lactation studies: considerations for study design, • |
| Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy in cooperation with U.S. FDA | Workshop | • Scientific and ethical considerations related to the inclusion of pregnant people in clinical trials, |
| European Medicines Agency (EMA) | Workshop Guideline | • Workshop on benefit-risk of medicines used during pregnancy and breastfeeding, • • Strategic reflection: EMA regulatory science to 2025 • |
| Heads of Medicines Agencies (HMA) | Guideline | Guideline on good pharmacovigilance practices: pregnant and breastfeeding women, |
| UK Commission on Human Medicines | Report | Report of the Commission on Human Medicines’ Expert Working Group on Hormone Pregnancy Tests, |
| Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) in collaboration with Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation | Project | Program of work: research to support the safer use of medicine during pregnancy, |
| University of Birmingham and Birmingham Health Partners Centre for Regulatory Science and Innovation | Reports | Safe and effective medicines for use in pregnancy: a call to action Healthy Mum, Healthy Baby, Healthy Future: Report Sets out Vision to Deliver Safe, Effective and Accessible Medicines for use in Pregnancy |
| Association of British Pharmaceutical Industry (ABPI) | Project | Maternal Health Project Group |
| Second Wave Initiative, University of North Carolina Center for Bioethics | Project | • Pregnancy and HIV/AIDS: seeking equitable study (PHASES) project: ending the evidence gap for pregnant women around HIV and co-infections: a call to action • Zika and Beyond: pregnancy, research, and public health emergencies |