4.5 Article

Treatment of Pregnant Women with Ivermectin during Mass Drug Distribution: Time to Investigate Its Safety and Potential Benefits

Journal

PATHOGENS
Volume 10, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pathogens10121588

Keywords

onchocerciasis; ivermectin; pregnancy; safety; epilepsy; nodding syndrome; trial; registry

Categories

Funding

  1. European Research Council [ERC 671055]
  2. Unitaid under the BOHEMIA grant

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Pregnant women are currently excluded from treatment programs involving ivermectin due to safety concerns, resulting in sustained infection reservoirs and depriving women of potential benefits. Studies suggest that treating O. volvulus infected women with ivermectin may improve pregnancy outcomes and reduce risks for their children. Establishing a roadmap, conducting clinical trials, and creating a pregnancy registry are proposed as steps towards providing essential interventions and building robust evidence for pregnant women.
To date, pregnant women are excluded from programmes delivering community-directed treatment of ivermectin (CDTI) for onchocerciasis and preventive chemotherapy of other helminthiases because of concerns over ivermectin safety during pregnancy. This systematic exclusion sustains an infection reservoir at the community level and deprives a vulnerable population from known benefits-there are indications that treating O. volvulus infected women may improve pregnancy outcomes and reduce the risk that their children develop onchocerciasis-associated morbidities. Furthermore, teratogenic effects are seen in non-clinical experiments at doses that far exceed those used in CDTI. Lastly, early, undetected and undeclared pregnancies are being systematically exposed to ivermectin in practice. Treatment of this population requires appropriate supporting evidence, for which we propose a three-pronged approach. First, to develop a roadmap defining the key steps needed to obtain regulatory clearance for the safe and effective use of ivermectin in all pregnant women who need it. Second, to conduct a randomised placebo-controlled double-blind clinical trial to evaluate the safety and benefits of ivermectin treatment in O. volvulus infected pregnant women. Such a trial should evaluate the possible effects of ivermectin in reducing adverse pregnancy outcomes and neonatal mortality, as well as in reducing the incidence of onchocerciasis-associated epilepsy. Third, to establish a pregnancy registry for women who inadvertently received ivermectin during pregnancy. This situation is not unique to ivermectin. Access to valuable therapies is often limited, delayed, or denied to pregnant women due to a lack of evidence. Concerns over protecting vulnerable people may result in harming them. We need to find acceptable ways to build robust evidence towards providing essential interventions during pregnancy.

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