Pharmacology in pregnancy and breastfeeding Flashcards

1
Q

What percent of women will use prescribed meds and also OTC meds during pregnancy?

A

60%

90%

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2
Q

Why may a woman be on medicines during pregnancy, childbirth and lactation?- what conditions? (6)

A
Hypertension 
Asthma 
Migraines 
Epilepsy 
Mental health disorders - chronic therapy 
long-term anticoagulant therapy use - AF
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3
Q

Physiological changes and drug toxicity - what are the 4 basic kinetic processes?

A

absorption
distribution
metabolism and elimination
excretion

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4
Q

How does absorption change? - oral route (2)

A

May be more difficult “morning sickness” nausea/vomiting - often first 3 months

Decrease in gastric emptying and gut motility
This is unlikely to be a problem with regular dosing, but may affect single doses

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5
Q

How does absorption change? - IM route

A

Blood flow may be increased, so absorption may also increase using this route

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6
Q

How does absorption change? - inhalation

A

Increased cardiac output and decreased tidal volume may cause increased absorption of inhaled drugs

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7
Q

Distribution changes - what will an increase in plasma volume and fat do to drug distribution?

A

Increase Vd

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8
Q

A greater dilution of plasma will?

A

decrease relative amount of plasma proteins.

- increase the fraction of free drug

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9
Q

free drug is?

A

pharmodyamically active

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10
Q

Metabolism changes - what can Oestrogen and progestogens do?

A

induce or inhibit liver P450 enzymes, increasing or reducing metabolism.

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11
Q

Phenytoin levels in pregnancy?

A

reduced (due to induction of metabolism)

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12
Q

Theophylline levels in pregnancy?

A

increased (due to inhibition of metabolism)

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13
Q

How is GFR affected with excretion changes?

A

GFR is increased in pregnancy by 50% leading to increased excretion of many drugs - reduction in circulating drug level

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14
Q

What can Excretion reduce?

A

plasma concentration, and can necessitate an increase in dose of medicines cleared by the kidney.

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15
Q

Pharmacodynamic means

pharmokinetic means?

A

what the drug does to the body

what the body does to the drug

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16
Q

Pharmacodynamic changes may affect what?

- what sites can be affected

A

site of drug action & the receptor response to drugs
- Concentration of drug, metabolites at sites of biological action (changes in blood flow)
Mechanism of action (changes in receptors

17
Q

What may be different in pregnancy?

A

Efficacy

- adverse effects may be different

18
Q

What factors affect placental drug transfer and drug effects on the fetus? (6)

A
  • Drug physiochemical properties
  • Rate at which drug crosses placenta and amount reaching the fetus
  • Duration of drug exposure
  • Distribution in different fetal tissues
  • Stage of placental and fetal development
  • Effects of drugs when used in combination
19
Q

Placental Transfer depends on? (3)

A
  • Molecular weight (smaller sizes will cross more easily)
  • Polarity (unionised molecules cross more readily)
  • Lipid solubility (lipid soluble drugs will cross the centre more easily)
20
Q

What can the placenta do?

A

metabolise some drugs

Safest to assume all drugs will cross placenta

21
Q

What type of drug crosses the placenta more easily?

A

Non-ionized drugs cross the placenta more easily than ionized drugs

22
Q

can protein-bound drugs cross the placenta?

A

yes, for non-bound versions this is not true

23
Q

Lipophilicity affect on placental transfer?

A

transfer

24
Q

Fetal pharmacokinetics - Distribution - why is this different compared to an adult (4)

A

Circulation is different (e.g. Umbilical vein to liver)
Less protein binding than adults therefore more “free” drug available
Little fat, so distribution different
Relatively more blood flow to brain , less well developed blood brain barrier

25
Q

Fetal Pharmacokinetics - how is the metabolism different (2)

A

Reduced enzyme activity, although this increases with gestation.
Fetus exhibits different P450 isoenzymes to adults.

26
Q

When does enzyme activity increase?

A

with gestation

27
Q

Fetal Pharmacokinetics - excretion - where does this happen (role of amniotic fluid) (3)

A
  • Excretion is into amniotic fluid – which the fetus swallows leading to recirculation.
  • Drugs and metabolites can accumulate in amniotic fluid. - TOXICITY
  • Placenta not functioning at delivery so can be issues with excretory function,
28
Q

Issues with PK and PD?

- info is available for what 4 drug groups?

A

uncertainty around dosing

  • Anti-convulsants
  • Anti-hypertensives
  • Analgesics
  • Antibacterials
29
Q

Safety of drugs in pregnancy - what are the 2 areas

A

Teratogenicity (first trimester)

Fetotoxicity (second and third trimester)

30
Q

Principles of prescribing for women of child-bearing age (5)

A
  • Always consider possibility of pregnancy (planned or not!)
  • Warn women of possible risks
  • When treating chronic medical conditions, advise women to attend before getting pregnant if planning to (optimise treatment)
  • Discuss contraception
  • If necessary, do not prescribe without contraception
31
Q

Principles of prescribing in pregnancy

A
  • try non-pharmacological treatment first
  • Use the drug with the best safety record (avoid new drugs unless proven safe).
  • Check the SPC (summary product characteristics) for the most up to date information
  • Use the lowest effective dose.
  • Use the drug for the shortest possible time, intermittently if possible.
  • Avoid the first 10 weeks of pregnancy if possible.
  • Consider stopping or reducing dose before delivery.
  • Never under a treat disease which may be harmful to the mother or fetus