Doxycycline use and adverse pregnancy or neonatal outcomes: A descriptive study using the United States Food and Drug Administration Adverse Event Reporting System database

Document Type

Article

Publication Title

Health Science Reports

Abstract

Background and Aims: Doxycycline is recommended for use in rickettsial diseases. The available evidence regarding its safety for rickettsial infection in pregnancy is limited. Our study aimed to describe the adverse events of doxycycline when used during pregnancy for any indication, in terms of adverse maternal and/or neonatal outcomes, using the United States Food and Drug Administration Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS). Methods: We used the OpenVigil software for extracting the safety reports from the United States submitted to the FAERS from 2004 to 2021. We manually reviewed reports of doxycycline use resulting in adverse pregnancy outcomes or congenital anomalies to describe the patient and safety event characteristics. Results: From 2004 to 2021, 59 individual case safety reports containing preferred terms indicative of drug exposure during pregnancy or drug-induced adverse fetal outcomes were identified in the FAERS database. Following deduplication and manual review, 20 relevant adverse event reports were obtained. Doxycycline was the suspect medication in 13/20 (65%) reports. The common adverse event terms reported were premature delivery/baby in 6 reports, spontaneous abortion in 6, intrauterine death in 2, and various congenital anomalies in the rest. Fifty percent of the safety reports contained other medications which could have potentially caused the outcome. Conclusions: The number of reported events in the FAERS database of adverse pregnancy/neonatal outcomes following doxycycline use is small, similar to the numbers reported from large cohort or surveillance studies. Given the presence of concomitant medications that could have contributed to the outcome, there does not seem to be a strong signal of harm, although this needs to be confirmed by surveillance studies.

DOI

10.1002/hsr2.931

Publication Date

11-1-2022

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