To be able to say that it is safe for a pregnant woman to take a particular medicine, we need to know that the safety data is robust. The ConcePTION project is piecing European data together, building a system to generate evidence on medicine safety for pregnant and breastfeeding women. A recent report provides an inventory of the core elements that are needed to generate the evidence that is required. The report guides researchers in performing high quality and meaningful population-based studies: allowing women and their doctors to make informed decisions and weigh the benefits against the risks of treatments.
The report selects, identifies and defines what we consider to be core evidence elements. These are the elements needed to assess how safe a particular medicine is to use in pregnancy. The report includes descriptions of what we call core outcome data elements, ranging from a foetus being small for its gestational age, preterm birth, stillbirth, miscarriages, malformations, the health of the mother, childhood development. It also describes how exposure of the mother to medication during pregnancy should be assessed. The report also lists the different methods that can be used to analyse this information and describes ways to assess the quality.
This work is a result of reviews of information that has already been published, combined with the knowledge of about 20 experts in different but complementary fields, from more than 10 different countries. This work has also been reviewed, discussed and validated by external experts and stakeholders in a consultation meeting.
Want to know more? Download and read the report D1.2 Core evidence elements for generating medication safety evidence for pregnancy using population-based data