Periodic Reporting for period 2 - InPreSS (International Pregnancy Safety Study)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2022-03-01 do 2023-02-28
Among women of childbearing age, diabetes mellitus has become an increasingly important public health problem in the last decades. Consequently, type 2 diabetes is now one of the most common disorders complicating pregnancy. Poorly controlled type 2 diabetes has been associated with significant maternal, fetal, and neonatal morbidity and mortality. Therefore, there is an increasing demand for safe and effective antidiabetic medication (ADM) for use in pregnancy.
Therefore, the overall objective of this fellowship was to assess the safety of the medications used to treat type 2 diabetes by investigating the risk of major malformations in infants prenatally exposed to metformin and to newer 2nd line non-insulin antidiabetic medications including sulfonylureas, dipeptidyl peptidase 4 (DPP-4) inhibitors, glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) analogues, and sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors. This objective was achieved by using data from US insurance claims databases, health care data from Israel, and the Nordic population health registers within the International Pregnancy Safety Study consortium (InPreSS). Combined, these sources include data for an unprecedented number of pregnant women for use in these high-quality pharmacoepidemiological observational research studies.
Of the 7 methodological and outcomes studies included in this project, 3 have been published in high ranking peer-reviewed medical journals, and the remainder have or will soon be submitted for peer-review and subsequent publication.
The 3 published studies are available open-access on the journal websites and in the repository Zenodo.
Additionally, the results of this project provide evidence on the safety of antidiabetic medication use in pregnancy. These findings can be used in the risk/benefit decisions pregnant women with the type 2 diabetes and their clinicians must make when deciding on the best treatment strategy before and during pregnancy.