Pubdate: Tue, 22 Nov 2005 Source: Medical Post (Canada) Copyright: 2005 The Medical Post Contact: http://www.medicalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3180 Author: Patricia Mark Note: Patricia Mark is a family physician in Nanoose Bay, B.C. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/women.htm (Women) THE DRUGS-PREGNANCY EQUATION Subtracting Methadone Maintenance Does Not Equal Improved Outcomes "Methadone complicates pregnancy" pronounced the Medical Post headline summarizing a study from Duke University. Oh, really? So if you're pregnant and polydrug using, better stay away from methadone? I chased down the original article, and to my dismay, this whole research project (never mind the terrible, impenetrable scientific prose), seemed too bizarre to merit publication in a journal. To start with, the patients on methadone--and by extrapolation and documentation, these were heavy drug users--were matched with women who had no history of illicit drug use and were not on methadone. And guess which group did better?! The authors concluded, by "dichotimising" methadone doses (whatever that means) that a lower methadone dose was better as there appeared to be a correlation to improved birth weight. So what would this lead the average family physician or obstetrician to conclude? Get pregnant women off methadone, outcomes will improve, birth weights will go up and everything will end happily ever after--right? Think again. For some reason, the authors of this study reached the simplistic conclusion that poor pregnancy outcomes in substance-dependent women are the result of methadone maintenance. On the contrary, extensive research has indicated greatly improved pregnancy outcomes in women who can be properly maintained on adequate doses of methadone, especially if, at the same time, they receive broad-based social support, which is the expectation in any methadone maintenance program of excellence. What happens to pregnant women who continue polysubstance use during pregnancy? They lack the basic necessities of life: food, shelter and safety. They work the streets to pay for their next fix. They don't eat. They are at the mercy of their pimps or other so-called "protectors" and physical abuse is part of their daily experience. They are at risk of getting or transmitting terrible diseases. And what are the pregnancy outcomes? These women have a low incidence of prenatal care. Prematurity, low birth weights and perinatal infections are common. Heroin has a short half-life, so there is a high incidence of abruption, for mother and baby experience recurrent withdrawal and consequent smooth muscle contractions. At the time of delivery, most infants born to actively drug using mothers are apprehended. Many will spend their childhood in and out of foster homes. These youngsters' long-term outcomes are predictably poor. But let's suppose a pregnant woman on heroin manages to consult a physician knowledgeable in addiction medicine. That physician will recommend initiation and stabilization on methadone, which in turn opens the door for her to get proper prenatal care and regular medical intervention. Her physician will work with social services to ensure adequate shelter and food. She will be referred to an obstetrician, for these are high-risk pregnancies. What about methadone dosage? One of the great truths about methadone in pregnancy is that inadequate or tapered doses are responsible for virtually 100% relapse, which, of course, confirms the irrational convictions of those determined to implicate methadone as the villain. Every woman who "fails on methadone," thanks to poor prescribing, becomes another statistic to prove their point. Are there any downsides to methadone maintenance in pregnancy? Yes. In spite of best medical interventions, some women continue to polysubstance use. Neonatal abstinence from methadone and heroin is equally challenging. There have been studies to show that sudden infant death syndrome is more common in babies born to methadone-maintained mothers. Management of labour and delivery can be difficult. So, is it methadone that complicates pregnancy, as this study implies? No. Substance abuse during pregnancy leads to terrible outcomes for mother and baby. Outcomes are predictably better for those women properly supported and maintained on methadone. It is ridiculous to compare such a cohort of patients with those who have no drug use history. The study also has disturbing judgmental undertones, reflective of times past when less analgesic for pain control was better; when blaming the patient was easier than working with her to help her survive physical and emotional illness compounded by desperate social circumstances. If this study leads physicians to refuse methadone maintenance to pregnant, opiate-abusing women, the authors will have done a terrible disservice to all those needy and marginalized women suffering from the illness we call addiction. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth