The Maternal Lifestyle Study: Drug Use by Meconium Toxicology and Maternal Self-Report

Author:

Lester Barry M.1,ElSohly Mahmoud2,Wright Linda L.3,Smeriglio Vincent L.4,Verter Joel5,Bauer Charles R.6,Shankaran Seetha7,Bada Henrietta S.8,Walls H. Chip9,Huestis Marilyn A.10,Finnegan Loretta P.11,Maza Penelope L.12

Affiliation:

1. From Brown Medical School, Women and Infants' Hospital and Bradley Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island;

2. ElSohly Laboratories, Inc, Oxford, Mississippi;

3. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Bethesda, Maryland;

4. National Institute on Drug Abuse, Bethesda, Maryland;

5. George Washington University, Biostatistics Center, Rockville, Maryland;

6. University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, Florida;

7. Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan;

8. University of Tennessee Memphis, College of Medicine, Memphis, Tennessee;

9. Forensic Toxicology Laboratory, University of Miami, Miami, Florida;

10. National Institute on Drug Abuse, Baltimore, Maryland;

11. Center for Substance Abuse Treatment, Rockville, Maryland; and

12. Administration on Children, Youth and Families, Washington, DC.

Abstract

Objective. The objective of this study was to describe drug use by pregnant women participating in the 4-site Maternal Lifestyle Study of in utero cocaine and/or opiate exposure. Methods. Meconium specimens of 8527 newborns were analyzed by immunoassay with GC/MS confirmation for metabolites of cocaine, opiates, cannabinoids, amphetamines, and phencyclidine. Maternal self-report of drug use was determined by hospital interview. Results. The prevalence of cocaine/opiate exposure in the 4 sites was 10.7% with the majority (9.5%) exposed to cocaine based on the combination of meconium analysis and maternal self-report. However, exposure status varied by site and was higher in low birth weight infants (18.6% for very low birth weight and 21.1% for low birth weight). Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) confirmation of presumptive positive cocaine screens was 75.5%. In the cocaine/opiate-exposed group, 38% were cases in which the mother denied use but the meconium was positive. There was 66% agreement between positive meconium results and positive maternal report. Only 2% of mothers reported that they used only cocaine during pregnancy and mothers were 49 times more likely to use another drug if they used cocaine. Conclusion. Accurate identification of prenatal drug exposure is improved with GC/MS confirmation and when the meconium assay is coupled with a maternal hospital interview. However, the use of GC/MS may have different implications for research than for public policy. We caution against the use of quantitative analysis of drugs in meconium to estimate the degree of exposure. Our study also highlights the polydrug nature of what used to be thought of as a cocaine problem.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

Reference43 articles.

1. Drug screening of newborns by meconium analysis: a large scale, prospective, epidemiologic study.;Ostrea;Pediatrics,1992

2. Incidence of intrauterine cocaine exposure in a suburban setting.;Schutzman;Pediatrics,1991

3. Cocaine use during pregnancy: prevalence and correlates.;Frank;Pediatrics,1988

4. Rapid isolation and detection of drugs in meconium of infants of drug dependent mothers.;Ostrea;Clin Chem,1988

5. Drug screening of meconium in infants of drug dependent mothers: an alternative to urine screening.;Ostrea;J Pediatr,1989

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