Drugs, Pregnancy & Lactation

An assessment of asthma drugs in pregnancy


 

Salmeterol (Serevent Diskus) (416)

Salmeterol is a long-acting beta2-adrenergic agonist that is given as an aerosol or dry powder for oral inhalation. Because the drug acts locally in the lung, plasma levels are very low or undetectable and are a result of swallowed salmeterol. The limited human pregnancy data does not suggest risk of embryo-fetal harm. High oral doses in animals were not teratogenic.

Theophylline (180)

Oral theophylline is a methylxanthine that is indicated for the treatment of symptoms of chronic asthma and other chronic lung diseases. According to ACOG, theophylline is not a preferred asthma therapy but considered an alternative agent. No published reports linking the use of theophylline with congenital defects have been located. However, the drug is teratogenic in mice, rats, and rabbits at doses close to the human dose.

Tiotropium (Spiriva Respimat) (490)

Tiotropium, an anticholinergic bronchodilator, is given by oral inhalation only. No reports describing the use of tiotropium during human pregnancy have been located. The animal data suggest low risk. However, because of its long elimination half-life (about 25 hours), use of tiotropium immediately before the diagnosis of an inadvertent pregnancy would most likely result in the exposure of a portion of organogenesis.

Triamcinolone (Kenalog-40) (435)

Triamcinolone is an inhaled corticosteroid with potency slightly greater than prednisone. Although the systemic use of the drug has a small absolute risk of oral clefts and fetal growth restriction, inhaled triamcinolone does not appear to cause embryo-fetal harm. The drug is teratogenic when given orally to animals.

Breastfeeding

It is not known if the above drugs are excreted into breast milk. Agents with relatively low molecular weights will probably be in milk. However, if the maternal levels are low, the amount in milk will probably be very small, if at all. Nevertheless, it is doubtful if any of these agents, even if they are excreted into milk, will have a harmful effect on a nursing infant.

Mr. Briggs is clinical professor of pharmacy at the University of California, San Francisco, and adjunct professor of pharmacy at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, as well as at Washington State University, Spokane. Mr. Briggs said he had no relevant financial disclosures. Email him at obnews@mdedge.com.

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