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      Drug use during pregnancy in Sweden – assessed by the Prescribed Drug Register and the Medical Birth Register

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          Abstract

          Purpose:

          The purpose of this research is to study drug use during pregnancy in Sweden and agreement between use according to antenatal medical records and dispensed drugs from a pharmacy database.

          Patients and methods:

          From the Swedish Medical Birth Register (MBR), we established a population-based cohort of 102,995 women who gave birth in 2007. Using the unique personal registration number, information on dispensed drugs from the Prescribed Drug Register (PDR) was obtained prior to, during, and after the pregnancies and compared with MBR information on drug use from standardized antenatal medical records.

          Results:

          According to the PDR, 57.6% of the 102,995 women filled a prescription with at least one drug during pregnancy and 50.9% during the lactating period (until 3 months after delivery). The most dispensed drugs during pregnancy were B-lactam antibacterials and penicillins. Agreement between drugs recorded in antenatal medical records and dispensed drugs was highest for drugs used for chronic conditions. The agreement was particularly high for thyroid therapy (85.3%), anti-intestinal inflammatory drugs (80.3%), antiepileptics (69.2%), immunosuppressants (67.4%), and insulin (63.8%). Agreement for drugs used for occasional use was generally lower, ranging between 42.5% for antihistamines and 0.8% for gynecological anti-infectives.

          Conclusions:

          A large proportion of women filled a prescription during pregnancy or the lactating period. Agreement between drug use in medical antenatal records and register information from a national pharmacy database was high for drugs used for chronic conditions but low for occasional use. For occasionally used drugs, medical record and register-based data may provide incomplete exposure information because of nonreporting or noncompliance.

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          Most cited references2

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          Special considerations in studies of drug-induced birth defects

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            Brain damage induced by prenatal exposure to dexamethasone in fetal rhesus macaques. I. Hippocampus

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              Author and article information

              Journal
              Clin Epidemiol
              Clinical Epidemiology
              Dove Medical Press
              1179-1349
              2011
              1 February 2011
              : 3
              : 43-50
              Affiliations
              Clinical Epidemiology Unit and Centre for Pharmacoepidemiology, Department of Medicine, Karolinska University Hospital and Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
              Author notes
              Correspondence: Olof Stephansson, Clinical Epidemiology Unit and Centre for Pharmacoepidemiology, Department of Medicine, Karolinska University Hospital and Institutet, T2, Solna, SE-171 76 Stockholm, Sweden, Tel +46 8 517 791 06, Fax +46 8 517 793 04, Email olof.stephansson@ 123456ki.se
              Article
              clep-3-043
              10.2147/CLEP.S16305
              3046184
              21386973
              038f4973-2a3a-4e70-b709-82ce17a25a35
              © 2011 Stephansson et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd.

              This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.

              History
              : 28 January 2011
              Categories
              Original Research

              Public health
              pharmacoepidemiology,drug utilization,pregnancy,lactation
              Public health
              pharmacoepidemiology, drug utilization, pregnancy, lactation

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