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Comparative Study
. 2007 Mar;44(2):194-202.
doi: 10.1597/05-208.1.

Drug treatment during pregnancy and isolated orofacial clefts in hungary

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Comparative Study

Drug treatment during pregnancy and isolated orofacial clefts in hungary

Erzsébet H Puhó et al. Cleft Palate Craniofac J. 2007 Mar.

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the possible association between all kinds of drug treatments during pregnancy and isolated cleft lip with or without cleft palate (CL/P) and posterior cleft palate (PCP) in the offspring.

Setting: The dataset of the large population-based Hungarian Case-Control Surveillance of Congenital Abnormalities, 1980-1996, was evaluated.

Participants: One thousand three hundred seventy-four cases with isolated CL/P and 601 with PCP, plus 38,151 population controls (without birth defects) and 20,868 malformed controls with other defects.

Intervention: In this observation case-control study the data collection was based on prospective medical records particularly prenatal logbook, retrospective maternal data via a self-reported questionnaire, and home visits of nonresponding mothers.

Main outcome measures: Isolated CL/P and PCP associated with drug treatments during pregnancy.

Results: An increased risk for isolated CL/P was found in cases born to mothers treated with amoxicillin, phenytoin, oxprenolol, and thiethylperazine during the second and third month of pregnancy, i.e., the critical period of isolated CL/P. Risk of isolated PCP was increased in mothers with oxytetracycline and carbamazepine treatment during the third and fourth month of pregnancy, i.e., the critical period of PCP.

Conclusions: This study confirmed the orofacial cleft (OFC) inducing effect of phenytoin, carbamazepine, oxytetracycline, and thiethylperazine and suggested a possible association between OFCs and oxprenolol and amoxicillin. However, drugs may have only a limited role in the origin of isolated OFCs.

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