210 likes | 787 Views
Women are often given inaccurate and conflicting advice and information relative to the effect of methadone on the fetus.They are often told that methadone will harm the baby and given advice to taper off methadone to
E N D
1.
John McCarthy, M.D.
Executive/Medical Director, Bi-Valley Medical Clinic, Sacramento
Methadone Treatment During Pregnancy
2. Women are often given inaccurate and conflicting advice and information relative to the effect of methadone on the fetus.
They are often told that methadone will harm the baby and given advice to taper off methadone to ‘protect the baby’.
This misinformation often extends to issues around breastfeeding.
You Need to Get Off That Stuff to Protect Your Baby!
3. URL:http://.atwatchdog.org/stories/stories_my babysstory.html (Addiction Treatment Watchdog)
Angel conceives on 90mg while tapering. She’s unaware she’s pregnant until she’s at 76mg. Then she asks her counselor about whether tapering is safe and is told, ‘without hesitation’, “it wouldn’t harm the baby”.
Her OB tells her ‘how awful it would be for the baby to be born on methadone’ and advises 5-10mg week taper.
Angel’s Story
4. Angel pursues 5mg week taper with no apparent problems, but her baby “kicked all of the time”.
At about 47mg she finds her own information on the risks of withdrawal, including fetal death.
She tells her counselor who informs the clinic doctor (for the first time) who confirms the risks and advises that the baby is probably in active withdrawal because of the rapid taper.
She goes back to the OB who is ‘enraged’ at the clinic telling her tapering was unsafe and writes a prescription to the clinic for 5-10mg/wk taper.
Angel tapers from 47mg to 7mg in 4 weeks. Angel’s Story
5. At 7mg she is physically shaking from withdrawal and the baby’s movements “became very frantic’” The OB suggests an increase to 11mg.
She finds the AT Forum website & CSAT’s TIP 2.
She requests a dose increase but the clinic doctor is reluctant to do this without the OB approval.
She is finally approval to increase to 40mg and finishes the pregnancy in mild chronic withdrawal. At birth her baby is treated for NAS. Angel’s Story
6. Prescription drug abuse is increasing among pregnant patients, while heroin use is going down.
Vicodin (hydrocodone) and Oxycontin (oxycodone) are the most common prescription drugs abused.
Half of the patients on methadone in a suburban methadone clinic are prescription abusers.
Virtually all patients in a private buprenorphine program are pill users. The Changing Demographics of Narcotic Addiction
7.
Pregnant women forced to maintain on low doses to “protect the baby from methadone”
Dosing regimen for pregnancy has not followed the increase in dose seen in non-pregnant patients
Higher doses have been presumed to result in more severe neonatal abstinence syndrome.
Research is confusing with 8 studies showing a correlation and 8 not.
Historical Issues with Pregnant Patients on Methadone
8. Specialized drug treatment counselor with training in interfacing with the obstetrical care system and CPS
Coordination with OB and hospital
Pregnancy group: supportive, educational
Psychiatric assessment, supportive psychotherapy, meds as needed
Random weekly toxicology screens
Bi-Valley Pregnancy Program Elements
9. Required weekly during pregnancy and early post-partum
Mutual support and sharing of pregnancy and birth experiences
Education re: methadone dosing, serum levels, metabolism, NAS, nursing, psychiatric, drug use effects on fetus, pain management, SIDS, Hep C, CPS
Nubain – an absolute contraindication Patient Support Group
10. Avoid maternal and intrauterine fetal withdrawal.
Individualize dose, no arbitrary limits.
Split dose all patients, BID, at times TID
Use serum levels to monitor maternal methadone metabolism and fetal exposure Bi-Valley Dosing Policy
11. Are higher methadone doses associated with more severe NAS or other adverse events?
Are higher doses associated with better drug treatment outcomes? Research Questions
12. 94 admissions between 2/99-5/03.
13 pregnancies were excluded:
4 miscariages
3 TAB
2 AMA
2 tapered off methadone in 3rd trimester
2 no information on infant, CPS hold
81 women, 81 infants
8 women had 2 pregnancies,
25 conceived on methadone
Study Selection Criteria
13. Ethnicity: White 64%, Hispanic 25%, African American 6%, Asian 4%, other 1%
Age 32 (range 20-46).
Age at first opiate use: 22, range 12-38
Years of addiction 10 (range 1-28)
38% report polydrug abuse, 78% are nicotine dependent on admission Maternal Demographics
14. Average dose 101mg/day (range 14-190)
Average serum level 146ng/ml (r 20-478)
78% negative urine toxicology during pregnancy (N=1188/1528)
Maternal Outcomes: Dose and Toxicology
15. Mean length of Rx: 24 weeks, (r 2-41)
Gestational age: 37.3 weeks
Birth weight: 2792 gram (6.2 lbs)
46% of mothers breastfed for some period
82% (66/81) of hospital toxicology screens negative for illicit drugs
Infant Outcomes: All (N=81)
16. 46% (N=37) of neonates required meds for NAS
Median length of stay in hospital: 10 days
Treated babies: median 25, r 8-105
Not Treated: median 3, r 1-44
Neonates were treated with: paregoric (N=20), phenobarb (N=10), Both (N=4), methadone (N=1), ativan (N=1), paregoric and ativan (N=1)
Neonatal Abstinence
17. Cohort divided into high dose (132mg/d, N=45) and low dose (62mg/d, N=36) groups to assess effect of dose on outcomes and NAS
There were 2 differences between the groups:
The high dose group had less drug use at delivery than the low dose group: 11% vs 27% (p=.05).
The high dose group had greater number of years of addiction (11.6 vs 7.8. p=.05).
There was no difference in treatable NAS or days in hospital between high dose and low dose groups
Comparison of High Dose (=>100mg/day) and Low Dose (<100mg/day) Groups