4.6 Article

The pregnant women as a drug orphan: a global survey of registered clinical trials of pharmacological interventions in pregnancy

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1471-0528.14151

Keywords

Clinical trials; drug development; drug safety; pharmaceuticals; pregnancy

Funding

  1. Women and Infants Research Foundation (WIRF) of Western Australia
  2. National Health & Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia

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Objective To undertake a survey of the world's clinical trial registries to provide current data on the number, nature, funding source and geographical distribution of pregnancy drug trials (PDT). Design and setting Comprehensive analysis of WHO-certified clinical trial registries. Methods Sixteen registries containing 301 538 trials (168 826 active in 2013-2014) were analysed to identify the numbers, location, funding sources, and areas of interest/development of PDTs. Results The percentage of PDTs varied from 0 to 7.4% across registries. Overall, just 0.32% (534) of all active registered studies were PDTs. The US registry (Clinicaltrials. gov) was the largest database, but contributed just 14% of all active PDTs. The majority of PDTs focused on anaesthesia/analgesia, preterm birth/ tocolysis, labour induction, endocrine and hypertensive disorders. Less than 6% of active PDTs focused on maternal or fetal health as a specific primary outcome, and only 4.4% included a preplanned pharmacokinetic analysis of the trial medications. A third of all active PDTs involved repurposing of existing medicines for applications in pregnancy, whereas only three new investigational drugs had been developed for a pregnancy indication. Seven percent of all active PDTs identified were pharmaceutical industry-funded. Inter-disease comparisons identified a similar to 50-fold disparity in trial activity between pregnancy and other comparable areas. Conclusions This study demonstrates unequivocally the marked under-representation of medication development, evaluation and safety trials in pregnancy. The likelihood that the current pharmaceutical landscape in pregnancy will improve in the foreseeable future is slim. Advocacy and increased awareness of the issue is necessary to achieve positive change.

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