Exposure to opioid analgesics during the first trimester of pregnancy appears to increase the risk of congenital anomalies diagnosed in the first year of life, researchers report.

While the absolute risk of congenital anomalies was low, these findings add to an increasing body of evidence suggesting that prenatal exposure to opioids may confer harm to infants post partum.

“We undertook a population-based cohort study to estimate associations between opioid analgesic exposure during the first trimester and congenital anomalies using health administrative data capturing all narcotic prescriptions during pregnancy,” lead author Alexa C. Bowie, MPH, of Queen’s University in Kingston, Ont., and colleagues reported in CMAJ.

The researchers retrospectively reviewed administrative health data in a single-payer health care system from 2013 to 2018. They identified parent-infant pair records for all live births and stillbirths that occurred at more than 20 weeks’ gestation.

The exposure of interest was a prescription for any opioid analgesic with a fill date between the estimated date of conception and less than 14 weeks’ gestation. The referent group included any infant not exposed to an opioid analgesic during the index pregnancy period.

Results

The study cohort included a total of 599,579 gestational parent-infant pairs. Of these, 11,903 (2.0%) were exposed to opioid analgesics, and most were exposed during the first trimester only (75.8%).

Overall, 2.0% of these infants developed a congenital anomaly during the first year of life; the prevalence of congenital anomalies was 2.0% in unexposed infants and 2.8% in exposed infants.

Relative to unexposed infants, the researchers observed greater risks among infants who were exposed for some anomaly groups, including many specific anomalies, such as ankyloglossia (any opioid: adjusted risk ratio, 1.88; 95% confidence interval, 1.30-2.72; codeine: aRR, 2.14; 95% CI, 1.35-3.40), as well as gastrointestinal anomalies (any opioid: aRR, 1.46; 95% CI, 1.15-1.85; codeine: aRR, 1.53; 95% CI, 1.12-2.09; tramadol: aRR, 2.69; 95% CI 1.34-5.38).

After sensitivity analyses, which included exposure 4 weeks before conception or excluded individuals with exposure to opioid analgesics before pregnancy, the findings remained unchanged.

“Although the overall risk was low, we observed an increased risk of any congenital anomaly with tramadol, and a previously unreported risk with morphine,” the researchers wrote.

“Previous studies reported elevated risks of heart anomalies with first-trimester exposure to any opioid analgesic, codeine, and tramadol, but others reported no association with any opioid analgesic or codeine,” they explained.

Interpreting the Results

Study author Susan Brogly, PhD, of Queen’s University said “Our population-based study confirms evidence of a small increased risk of birth defects from opioid analgesic exposure in the first trimester that was observed in a recent study of private insurance and Medicaid beneficiaries in the U.S. We further show that this small increased risk is not due to other risk factors for fetal harm in women who may take these medications.”

“An opioid prescription dispensed in the first trimester would imply that there was an acute injury or chronic condition also present in the first trimester, which may also be associated with congenital abnormalities,” commented Elisabeth Poorman, MD, MPH, a clinical instructor and primary care physician at the University of Washington in Seattle.

“Opioid use disorder is often diagnosed incorrectly; since the researchers used diagnostic billing codes to exclude individuals with opioid use disorder, some women may have been missed,” Poorman explained.

Bowie and colleagues acknowledged that a key limitation of the study was the identification of cases using diagnostic billing codes. As a result, exposure-dependent recording bias could be present and limit the applicability of the findings.

“The diagnosis and documentation of minor anomalies and those with subtle medical significance could be vulnerable to exposure-dependent recording bias,” Bowie wrote.

Poorman recommended that these results should be interpreted with caution given these and other limitations. “Overall, results from this study may imply that there is limited evidence to suspect opioids are related to congenital abnormalities due to a very small difference observed in relatively unequal groups,” she concluded.

This study received funding from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institutes of Child Health and Human Development and was also supported by the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, which is funded by an annual grant from the Ontario Ministry of Health. One author reported receiving honoraria from the National Institutes of Health and a grant from the Canadian Institute of Health Research, outside the submitted work. No other competing interests were declared.

This article originally appeared on MDedge.com, part of the Medscape Professional Network.

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