| Literature DB >> 36141480 |
Felix Rafael De Bie1, David Basurto1, Sailesh Kumar2, Jan Deprest1,3, Francesca Maria Russo1,3.
Abstract
Sildenafil, a phosphodiesterase 5 inhibitor with a vasodilatory and anti-remodeling effect, has been investigated concerning various conditions during pregnancy. Per indication, we herein review the rationale and the most relevant experimental and clinical studies, including systematic reviews and meta-analyses, when available. Indications for using sildenafil during the second and third trimester of pregnancy include maternal pulmonary hypertension, preeclampsia, preterm labor, fetal growth restriction, oligohydramnios, fetal distress, and congenital diaphragmatic hernia. For most indications, the rationale for administering prenatal sildenafil is based on limited, equivocal data from in vitro studies and rodent disease models. Clinical studies report mild maternal side effects and suggest good fetal tolerance and safety depending on the underlying pathology.Entities:
Keywords: 2nd- and 3rd-trimester pregnancy; congenital diaphragmatic hernia; fetal distress; fetal growth restriction; fetal therapy; oligohydramnios; preeclampsia; preterm labor; pulmonary arterial hypertension; sildenafil citrate
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36141480 PMCID: PMC9517616 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph191811207
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1Nitric oxide pathway. Schematic representation of the mechanism of action of sildenafil on the pulmonary vasculature. eNOS, endothelial nitric oxide synthase; NO, nitric oxide; GC, guanylate cyclase; GTP, guanosine triphosphate; GMP, guanosine triphosphate; cGMP, cyclic GMP; PDE, phosphodiesterase; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; AMP, adenosine monophosphate; cAMP, cyclic AMP; PKG, cGMP-dependent protein kinase; PKA, cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Reprinted with permission from [6], 2022, Bentham Sciences. Drawing: Myrthe Boymans.
RCT’s assessing sildenafil for preeclampsia.
| Author (Year) [Reference], Study Type—Country | Population [n = Sildenafil/Total] | Sildenafil Dosing | Gestational Age at Administration | Results | Study Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Samangaya et al. (2009) [ | Early-onset preeclampsia [n = 19/39] | 20–80 mg, 3/day, PO | 24–34 weeks | Sildenafil reduced maternal blood pressure but did not prolong pregnancy. No safety issues were observed regarding neonates. | Low patient number, low sildenafil dose, short administration duration (<15 days), and late advanced gestation at inclusion ~31+4 weeks. |
| Trapani et al. (2016) [ | Early-onset preeclampsia [n = 50/100] | 50 mg, 3/day, PO | 24–33 weeks | Sildenafil increased pregnancy duration by four days, and reduced maternal mean arterial pressures and resistance in uterine and umbilical arteries. Pulsatility indices of the fetal middle cerebral artery were unaffected by sildenafil. No safety issues were observed regarding neonates. | Lack of power to compare neonatal outcomes, late gestation at inclusion ~29+1 weeks. |
RCT = randomized controlled trial, PO = per os/oral.
RCT’s assessing sildenafil for preterm labor.
| Author (Year) [Reference], Study Type—Country | Population [n = Sildenafil/Total] | Sildenafil Dosing | Gestational Age at Administration | Results | Study Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mohammadi et al. (2021) [ | Threatened preterm labor [n = 66/132] | 10 mg nifedipine 3–4/day, PO + 25 mg sildenafil 3/day, PV | 26–34 weeks | Nifedipine combined with sildenafil reduced delivery within seven days of admission, prolonged latency, and reduced prematurity compared to nifedipine alone. | Limited description of baseline group characteristics, missing sample size calculation, published in the group’s institutional journal (Tehran University of Medical Sciences), safety data not reported. |
RCT = randomized controlled trial, PO = per os/oral, PV = per vaginam/vaginal.
Clinical studies assessing sildenafil for FGR.
| Author (Year) [Reference], Study Type—Country | Population [n = Sildenafil/Total] | Sildenafil Dosing | Gestational Age at Administration | Results | Study Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Von Dadelszen et al. (2011) [ | Severe, early-onset FGR1 [n = 10/27] | 25 mg, 3/day, PO, until birth | 24–34 weeks | Sildenafil increased fetal abdominal circumference growth velocity. No maternal side effects were noted. | Small sample size, non-randomized set-up. |
| Dastjerdi et al. (2012) [ | Severe, early-onset FGR2 [n = 14/41] | 50 mg, once, PO | 35 ± 2 weeks | Sildenafil improved umbilical and fetal MCA Doppler velocimetry. | Small sample size, only short-term (2 h post treprostinil administration) functional Doppler outcomes, no survival or birth weight data. |
| El Sayed et al. (2017) [ | Severe, early-onset FGR3 [n = 27/54] | 50 mg, 1/day, PO | 29 ± 2 weeks | Umbilical, uterine, and MCA Doppler velocimetry improved two hours after sildenafil administration. Sildenafil prolonged pregnancy duration, increased fetal birth weight, and reduced the rate of NICU admissions. No adverse events were reported. | Only short-term (2 h post treprostinil administration) functional Doppler outcomes, poor data integrity checklist score *. |
| Maged et al. (2018) [ | FGR4
| 20 mg 1/day–20 mg 3/day, PO, until birth | 24–32 weeks | Umbilical Doppler indices were improved four weeks after starting sildenafil. Higher birth weight in the treprostinil-treated group. | Serious concerns were expressed by the editor about the validity of the published data. A wide spectrum of FGR was included in the study, not only severe, and early-onset FGR. Variable, unspecified sildenafil dose in the treatment arm. |
| Sharp et al. (2018) [ | Severe, early-onset FGR5 [n = 70/135] | 25 mg, 3/day, PO, until 32 wks or birth | 22–30 weeks | Sildenafil did not prolong pregnancy or improve survival or birthweight in severe FGR. | No standardized fetal monitoring protocol or triggers for delivery across centers. Lack of power for clinical outcomes. |
| Groom et al. (2019) [ | Severe, early-onset FGR5 [n = 63/122] | 25 mg, 3/day, PO, until 32 wks or birth | 22–30 weeks | Antenatal maternal sildenafil use shows no beneficial effect on growth in early-onset FGR, but also no evidence of harm. | No standardized monitoring or delivery protocols across centers. Lack of power for clinical outcomes. |
| Pels et al. (2020) [ | Severe, early-onset FGR6 [n = 108/216] | 25 mg, 3/day, PO, until 32 wks or birth | 20–30 weeks | Antenatal maternal sildenafil did not reduce the risk of perinatal mortality or major neonatal morbidity. The results suggest that sildenafil may increase the risk of neonatal pulmonary hypertension. | Incomplete study recruitment. |
| Shehata et al. (2020) [ | Severe FGR7 | 20 mg, 1/day, PO, until birth | 24–34 weeks | Sildenafil improved fetal growth velocity, decreased umbilical artery pulsatility index, and increased the pulsatility index in the MCA. | A wide spectrum of FGR was included in the study, not only severe but early-onset FGR. Poor data integrity checklist score *. |
1 Severe & early onset FGR (fetal abdominal circumference (FAC) percentile < 5%) and gestational age was <25+0 or estimated fetal weight (EFW) was <600 g, 2 growth percentile < 3%, 3 Placental insufficiency within ≥ 24 weeks, 4 EFW percentile < 10% or FAC percentile < 10% and abnormal umbilical artery Doppler, 5 Growth percentile < 10% & absent/reversed end-diastolic flow in umbilical artery on Doppler between 22.0–29.6 weeks gestation, 6 Gestational age 20+0–27+6, with FCA percentile <3% or EFW percentile < 5% with abnormal dopplers (UA notching, UA PI >95%, MCA PI < 5%) or a maternal hypertensive disorder. 7 E Singleton pregnancy at gestational age 24+0–34+0 weeks and an FAC percentile < 5%. CS = Cohort study, RCT = Randomized Controlled Trial, PnRT = Prospective non-Randomized Trial, MCA = middle cerebral artery, NICU = neonatal intensive care unit. PO = per os/oral. * Poor data integrity checklist score as determined by [12] in Table 2 of the online web supplement.
Clinical studies assessing sildenafil for fetal distress.
| Author (Year) [Reference], Study Type—Country | Population [n = Sildenafil/Total] | Sildenafil Dosing | Gestational Age at Administration | Results | Study Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Turner et al. (2020) [ | Fetal distress, intrapartum [n = 150/300] | 50–150 mg 3/day, PO (max 3 doses) | >37 weeks | Intrapartum sildenafil reduced the need for emergency operative birth by 51% and reduced meconium-stained liquor or pathologic fetal heart rate pattern by 43%. | Underpowered to determine a difference in maternal of neonatal adverse events. |
RCT = randomized controlled trial, PO = per os/oral.