COVID-19 and pregnancy: A European study on pre- and post-infection medication use

Author:

Hurley EimirORCID,Geisler Benjamin P.ORCID,Lupattelli AngelaORCID,Poblador-Plou BeatrizORCID,Lassalle Régis,Jové Jérémy,Bernard Marie-Agnes,Sakr Dunia,Sanfélix-Gimeno GabrielORCID,Sánchez-Saez FranciscoORCID,Rodríguez-Bernal Clara L.ORCID,Sabaté MònicaORCID,Ballarín ElenaORCID,Aguilera CristinaORCID,Jordan SueORCID,Thayer Daniel,Farr Ian,Ahmed Saira,Bartolini ClaudiaORCID,Limoncella Giorgio,Paoletti Olga,Gini RosaORCID,Maglanoc Luigi A.ORCID,Dudukina ElenaORCID,Ehrenstein VeraORCID,Alsina Ema,Vaz Tiago A.ORCID,Riera-Arnau JuditORCID,Sturkenboom Miriam C. J. M.ORCID,Nordeng Hedvig M. E.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Purpose The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted medication needs and prescribing practices, including those affecting pregnant women. Our goal was to investigate patterns of medication use among pregnant women with COVID-19, focusing on variations by trimester of infection and location. Methods We conducted an observational study using six electronic healthcare databases from six European regions (Aragon/Spain; France; Norway; Tuscany, Italy; Valencia/Spain; and Wales/UK). The prevalence of primary care prescribing or dispensing was compared in the 30-day periods before and after a positive COVID-19 test or diagnosis. Results The study included 294,126 pregnant women, of whom 8943 (3.0%) tested positive for, or were diagnosed with, COVID-19 during their pregnancy. A significantly higher use of antithrombotic medications was observed particularly after COVID-19 infection in the second and third trimesters. The highest increase was observed in the Valencia region where use of antithrombotic medications in the third trimester increased from 3.8% before COVID-19 to 61.9% after the infection. Increases in other countries were lower; for example, in Norway, the prevalence of antithrombotic medication use changed from around 1–2% before to around 6% after COVID-19 in the third trimester. Smaller and less consistent increases were observed in the use of other drug classes, such as antimicrobials and systemic corticosteroids. Conclusion Our findings highlight the substantial impact of COVID-19 on primary care medication use among pregnant women, with a marked increase in the use of antithrombotic medications post-COVID-19. These results underscore the need for further research to understand the broader implications of these patterns on maternal and neonatal/fetal health outcomes.

Funder

European Medicines Agency

University of Oslo

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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