2012
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2393-12-89
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Protocol for a drugs exposure pregnancy registry for implementation in resource-limited settings

Abstract: BackgroundThe absence of robust evidence of safety of medicines in pregnancy, particularly those for major diseases provided by public health programmes in developing countries, has resulted in cautious recommendations on their use. We describe a protocol for a Pregnancy Registry adapted to resource-limited settings aimed at providing evidence on the safety of medicines in pregnancy.Methods/DesignSentinel health facilities are chosen where women come for prenatal care and are likely to come for delivery. Staff… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…Since 95% of the affected infants have no other malformations, isolated postaxial polydactyly has been considered a “mild” abnormality. Because of its isolated nature, the lack of medical significance and the fact that it has never been shown to be produced by any human teratogens (Holmes, ), it can be excluded as an outcome in studies of putative teratogens in populations in Africa (Mehta, Clerk, & Allen, ). If included as a significant malformation, it would be the most common outcome identified and, yet, not likely to be a teratogenic effect.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since 95% of the affected infants have no other malformations, isolated postaxial polydactyly has been considered a “mild” abnormality. Because of its isolated nature, the lack of medical significance and the fact that it has never been shown to be produced by any human teratogens (Holmes, ), it can be excluded as an outcome in studies of putative teratogens in populations in Africa (Mehta, Clerk, & Allen, ). If included as a significant malformation, it would be the most common outcome identified and, yet, not likely to be a teratogenic effect.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, the World Health Organization is creating a centralized database for drug exposures in pregnancy [74]. The aim is to be able to pool data from LMICs in order to have power to study rare outcomes and rare exposures across different settings.…”
Section: Art Safety Surveillance Programsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Differences in measurement or definitions of outcomes can lead both to under- and over-diagnosis and have to be considered during primary study design as it not possible to control for differences in meta-analysis or data pooling. It is encouraging that steps have been taken by the research community and by the WHO towards building future sustainable collaborations between key cohorts across the globe [74,78]. …”
Section: 0 Expert Opinionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The WHO Pregnancy Registry was piloted in 2010/2011 in Brazil, Ghana, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania, as a pregnancy surveillance system for low-and middle-income countries (LMICs). It has, however, not been widely implemented and challenges are anticipated with data completeness and validity [54][55][56]. Together these surveillance studies and registries may identify signals of potential teratogenicity which can be evaluated across all available resources [50,51].…”
Section: Box 2 Case Scenarios: Efavirenz and Teratogenicitymentioning
confidence: 99%