TY - JOUR
T1 - Use of misoprostol during pregnancy and Mobius' syndrome in infants
AU - Pastuszak, Anne L.
AU - Schüler, Lavinia
AU - Speck-Martins, Carlos E.
AU - Coelho, Katia Edni F.A.
AU - Cordello, Synthia M.
AU - Vargas, Fernando
AU - Brunoni, Decio
AU - Schwarz, Ida V.D.
AU - Larrandaburu, Mariela
AU - Safattle, Heloisa
AU - Meloni, Vera F.A.
AU - Koren, Gideon
AU - Neto, Jordão C.
PY - 1998/6/25
Y1 - 1998/6/25
N2 - Background Patients with upper gastrointestinal ulceration may be treated with misoprostol, but it is not recommended for pregnant women because it may stimulate uterine contractions and cause vaginal bleeding and miscarriage. Recent data from Brazil, where misoprostol is used orally and vaginally as an abortifacient, have suggested a relation between the use of misoprostol by women in an unsuccessful attempt to terminate pregnancy and Mobius' syndrome (congenital facial paralysis) in their infants. Methods We compared the frequency of misoprostol use during the first trimester by mothers of infants in whom MObius' syndrome was diagnosed and mothers of infants with neural-tube defects in Brazil. All diagnoses in infants were made between January 16, 1990, and May 31, 1996, by clinical geneticists at seven hospitals who also interviewed the mothers and recorded information about the administration of misoprostol, among other data. Results We identified 96 infants with MObius' syndrome and matched them with 96 infants with neural-tube defects. The mean age at the time of the diagnosis of Mobius' syndrome was 16 months (range, 0.5 to 78), and the diagnosis of neural-tube defects was made within 1 week of birth in most cases. Among the mothers of the 96 infants with MObius' syndrome, 47 (49 percent) had used misoprostol in the first trimester of pregnancy, as compared with 3 (3 percent) of the mothers of the 96 infants with neural-tube defects (odds ratio, 29.7; 95 percent confidence interval, 11.6 to 76.0). Twenty of the mothers of the infants with MObius' syndrome had taken misoprostol only orally (odds ratio, 38.8; 95 percent confidence interval, 9.5 to 159.4), 20 had taken misoprostol both orally and vaginally, 3 had taken the drug vaginally, and 4 did not report how they took the drug. Conclusions Attempted abortion with misoprostol is associated with an increased risk of Mobius' syndrome in infants.
AB - Background Patients with upper gastrointestinal ulceration may be treated with misoprostol, but it is not recommended for pregnant women because it may stimulate uterine contractions and cause vaginal bleeding and miscarriage. Recent data from Brazil, where misoprostol is used orally and vaginally as an abortifacient, have suggested a relation between the use of misoprostol by women in an unsuccessful attempt to terminate pregnancy and Mobius' syndrome (congenital facial paralysis) in their infants. Methods We compared the frequency of misoprostol use during the first trimester by mothers of infants in whom MObius' syndrome was diagnosed and mothers of infants with neural-tube defects in Brazil. All diagnoses in infants were made between January 16, 1990, and May 31, 1996, by clinical geneticists at seven hospitals who also interviewed the mothers and recorded information about the administration of misoprostol, among other data. Results We identified 96 infants with MObius' syndrome and matched them with 96 infants with neural-tube defects. The mean age at the time of the diagnosis of Mobius' syndrome was 16 months (range, 0.5 to 78), and the diagnosis of neural-tube defects was made within 1 week of birth in most cases. Among the mothers of the 96 infants with MObius' syndrome, 47 (49 percent) had used misoprostol in the first trimester of pregnancy, as compared with 3 (3 percent) of the mothers of the 96 infants with neural-tube defects (odds ratio, 29.7; 95 percent confidence interval, 11.6 to 76.0). Twenty of the mothers of the infants with MObius' syndrome had taken misoprostol only orally (odds ratio, 38.8; 95 percent confidence interval, 9.5 to 159.4), 20 had taken misoprostol both orally and vaginally, 3 had taken the drug vaginally, and 4 did not report how they took the drug. Conclusions Attempted abortion with misoprostol is associated with an increased risk of Mobius' syndrome in infants.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=2642599038&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1056/NEJM199806253382604
DO - 10.1056/NEJM199806253382604
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C2 - 9637807
AN - SCOPUS:2642599038
SN - 0028-4793
VL - 338
SP - 1881
EP - 1885
JO - New England Journal of Medicine
JF - New England Journal of Medicine
IS - 26 I
ER -