Abstract
BackgroundHealth databases are a promising resource for epidemiological studies on medications safety during pregnancy. The reliability of information on medications exposure and pregnancy timing is a key methodological issue. This study (a) compared maternal self-reports and database information on medication use, gestational age, date of delivery; (b) quantified the degree of agreement between sources; (c) assessed predictors of agreement.MethodsPregnant women recruited in a prenatal clinic in Friuli Venezia Giulia (FVG) region, Italy, from 2007 to 2009, completed a questionnaire inquiring on medication use during pregnancy, gestational age and date of delivery. Redeemed prescriptions and birth certificate records were extracted from regional databases through record linkage. Percent agreement, Kappa coefficient, prevalence and bias-adjusted Kappa (PABAK) were calculated. Odds Ratio (OR), with 95 % confidence interval (95 % CI), of ≥1 agreement was calculated through unconditional logistic regression.ResultsThe cohort included 767 women, 39.8 % reported medication use, and 70.5 % were dispensed at least one medication. Kappa and PABAK indicated almost perfect to substantial agreement for antihypertensive medications (Kappa 0.86, PABAK 0.99), thyroid hormones (0.88, 0.98), antiepileptic medications (1.00, 1.00), antithrombotic agents (0.70, 0.96). PABAK value was greater than Kappa for medications such as insulin (Kappa 0.50, PABAK 0.99), antihistamines for systemic use (0.50, 0.99), progestogens (0.28, 0.79), and antibiotics (0.12, 0.63). Adjusted OR was 0.48 (95 % CI 0.26; 0.90) in ex- vs. never smokers, 0.64 (0.38; 1.08) in < high school vs. university, 1.55 (1.01; 2.37) in women with comorbidities, 2.25 (1.19; 4.26) in those aged 40+ vs. 30–34 years.Gestational age matched exactly in 85.2 % and date of delivery in 99.5 %.ConclusionsFor selected medications used for chronic conditions, the agreement between self-reports and dispensing data was high. For medications with low to very low prevalence of use, PABAK provides a more reliable measure of agreement. Maternal reports and dispensing data are complementary to each other to increase the reliability of information on the use of medications during pregnancy. Birth certificates provide reliable data on the timing of pregnancy. FVG health databases are a valuable source of data for pregnancy research.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12884-015-0745-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Highlights
Health databases are a promising resource for epidemiological studies on medications safety during pregnancy
For selected medications used for chronic conditions, the agreement between self-reports and dispensing data was high
Friuli Venezia Giulia (FVG) health databases are a valuable source of data for pregnancy research
Summary
Health databases are a promising resource for epidemiological studies on medications safety during pregnancy. This study (a) compared maternal self-reports and database information on medication use, gestational age, date of delivery; (b) quantified the degree of agreement between sources; (c) assessed predictors of agreement. The assessment of the association between maternal use of medications during pregnancy and pregnancy or infant outcomes often rely on pregnancy medication exposure registries [3, 4] and on studies using administrative databases [5,6,7], registering prescriptions at the general physician prescription level or at pharmacy dispensing level. Pregnancy registries can provide timely ascertainment of exposure and outcomes, and good quality information on their temporal association when data are collected prospectively. Limitations include: (a) potential for selection bias, as registration is spontaneous, (b) insufficient power for some outcomes, (c) problems in identifying an appropriate comparison group, (d) quality and completeness of information depends on healthcare providers and/or maternal reporting [8]
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