About ConcePTION

ConcePTION is a project funded by the Innovative Medicines Initiative, a private public partnership. The project was launched in April 2019.

We believe that we have an important societal obligation to radically and rapidly reduce uncertainty about the effects of medication used during pregnancy and breastfeeding to benefit women in making informed decisions about medications used before, during and after pregnancy.

Reporting medicine use in pregnancy

Did you use any medicines when you were pregnant? Here is how you and your health care provider can report what we call an exposure.

Ten principles for stakeholder engagement in the ConcePTION project

The ConcePTION project is building much-needed knowledge for women and health care professionals. To achieve our goal of building an ecosystem for medicine safety in pregnancy and breastfeeding, we need to engage with women, their partners, their doctors, pharmacists, midwives and nurses, the companies that develop medicines and the authorities that approve them and decide what becomes available to patients. Our goal is to work in an open and inclusive way, with the spirit of mutual respect and trust. Here is how we engage with stakeholders in an ethical way.

News

Nov
05
2024
Cetirizine is a medicine that is used to prevent and treat allergy symptoms, such as red, itchy eyes, sneezing, a runny or stuffy nose, or hives. This medicine is recommended for breastfeeding women, which makes it important to study how much of the drug transfers to mother’s milk. The ConcePTION project has developed a new pharmacokinetic (popPK) model to predict the concentrations of cetirizine in human breast milk, and to estimate how much of the medicine that is received by the breastfed infant. | READ MORE >>
Nov
04
2024
This week, ConcePTION is taking part in the #MedSafetyWeek social media campaign together with 107 organisations from 94 countries, to raise awareness of preventing side effects of medicine. Because sometimes pregnant women need to take medicines. And during pregnancy, some effects cannot be assessed until after the child is born. Therefore, it is important that pregnant women report their medicine use regardless of their immediate effects. | READ MORE >>
Nov
01
2024
For ethical reasons, pregnant and breastfeeding women are rarely included in clinical trials. To close the knowledge gap regarding the safety of medicine use during pregnancy and breastfeeding, researchers rely on other sources of information. One of them is electronic healthcare data – sometimes referred to as Real World Data. These data are crucial for understanding health events in populations and making decisions in public health and regulation. A paper recently published in American Journal of Epidemiology suggests a method to improve the validity of studying health events in populations using Real World Data. | READ MORE >>

The ConcePTION consortium

The project unites an unprecedented 88 organizations from 22 countries, including the European Medicines Agency, drug manufacturers, academia, public health organizations, and teratology networks to innovate new solutions to a decades-long public health issue.

OUR CONSORTIUM
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The ConcePTION project has received funding from the Innovative Medicines Initiative 2 Joint Undertaking under grant agreement No 821520. This Joint Undertaking receives support from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme and EFPIA.