Abstract

Anticoagulation with coumarins is an effective therapy during pregnancy. Fetal exposure to coumarin derivatives during the first trimester, however, is associated with skeletal anomalies (warfarin or coumarin embryopathy). Information about long-term effects of prenatal coumarin exposure on the skeletal development is not available. We investigated growth and body proportions at school age of children exposed to coumarins in utero. A blind population-based cohort study was conducted on 307 exposed children and 267 non-exposed controls ages 8-15 years. The exposed cohort was based on a prospective registry of coumarin-treated pregnant women. Anthropometric data included height, weight, head circumference, and measurements to evaluate body proportions. The mean height of exposed children did not differ from that of the non-exposed children (mean difference 0.01 SD). In addition, no differences were found for the proportional measures. As a group, children exposed in the first trimester showed no evidence of growth impairment. Two children in this group, however, were born with signs of coumarin embryopathy and one of these displayed a deficit in height at school age. Long-term growth was not affected by a high cumulative dosage or exposure after the first trimester. We conclude that, when exposure during the first trimester is avoided, coumarin therapy during pregnancy has no demonstrable risk for the child's skeletal development.

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