Treating Pregnancy Related Pain in the ED
/Pain management in the emergency department setting can be challenging even without the added complexity of pregnancy. Clinical trial data is limited on pregnant patients so data is limited in evaluating safety of medications. This review focuses on commonly prescribed analgesics and the data surrounding their safety profiles in pregnancy ranging from evaluation of increased risk of spontaneous abortions, birth defects and long-term developmental outcomes in the child.
How common is analgesic use in pregnancy?
Pain medications are the most common medication consumed by pregnant women
Reports of up to 57% of patients in USA had at least 1+ visit to ED for complaint involving pain [1]
Studies in the United States showed that up to 65-70% of pregnant women reported acetaminophen use with increasing use as the pregnancy progresses
NSAIDs are used by 2-15% of women and consumption tends to decrease over the duration of pregnancy [2,3]
Opioid use reported by 6-14% of women during pregnancy and this is increasing, similar to that of rates of opioid use overall [4]
What are risks of inadequately controlling pain in pregnancy?
Increased chronic pain states that may worsen maternal stress and predispose to depression, sleep deprivation and hypertension [2]
Who | When | Guidance |
---|---|---|
FDA | January 2015 | Drug Safety Communication: - Unable to make any new recommendations at that time due to the limited nature of the studies completed - Recommend weighing the pros and cons of pain medications before prescribing them during pregnancy - Recommend avoidance of NSAIDs during the 3rd trimester due to documented risk of closure of the premature ductus arteriosus [13] |
Society for MFM | March 2017 | Acetaminophen use in pregnancy: - Unable to provide safety recommendations for acetaminophen regarding neurodevelopmental outcomes due to lack of conclusive data published to date [14] |
EMRA | July 2020 | - Acetaminophen: gold standard - Ibuprofen: safe in 1st tri, avoid in 2nd and 3rd - Opioids: only use for severe pain or if no improvement with non-opioids; “start low, go slow” [15] |
How can I determine the safety of medications in pregnancy?
The United States has abandoned the A-X category system that was previously used for labeling the safety of medications
Recommendations are presented in writing by the FDA and specialty healthcare groups to provide more specifics [2]
Medications
Below we will cover data on recently posed questions regarding the most commonly used analgesics (as of 10.2020). As always this is data, not advice.
Quick links
Acetaminophen - NSAIDs - Opioids - Comparisons - Others
Acetaminophen
Will acetaminophen lead to long-term adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes?
Summary (TLDR)
Children exposed to acetaminophen had an increased risk of ADHD-like behavior, diagnosis of hyperkinetic disorder or prescription for ADHD medications
When controlling for same-sex sibling pairs and differences in exposure, they found that children with long-term exposure (>28 days) had worse neurodevelopmental outcomes (ex. motor development, communication, higher activity levels)
+ The Data
NSAIDS
Do NSAIDs increase the risk of spontaneous abortions in early trimesters?
Summary (TLDR)
Conflicting data between two large studies with one showing increased risk of spontaneous abortions and the other showing no increased risk aside from use of indomethacin.
+ The Data
Opioids
Do opioids increase the risk of birth defects early in pregnancy? When will they cause neonatal abstinence syndrome?
Summary (TLDR)
Opioids showed an increased association with cardiac and neural tube defects
Long-term opioids and use in 3rd trimester coupled with additional maternal risk factors lead to highest risk of NAS, whereas short-term, low-dose opioids even in the third trimester showed low absolute risk for NAS
+ The Data
A COMPARISON OF THE THREE
Is acetaminophen really safer than NSAIDs or opioids?
Summary (TLDR)
Compared to acetaminophen, NSAID and opioid use showed increased risk of birth defects, which was magnified overall when NSAIDs/opioids used in combination.
+ The Data
Other Therapies - Ketamine
How about some pain dose ketamine?
Summary (TLDR)
Ketamine was used for 2 patients with severe sickle cell crises during pregnancy with possible improvement in pain and no documented adverse effects. 2 patients is not a study and this is not yet ready for routine use.
+ The Data
Takeaway Points
Pregnancy is complicated: discuss with all patients the risks and benefits to prescribing analgesics during the preconceptional and gestational periods
Medication | Risks | Recommendation |
---|---|---|
Acetaminophen | Limited studies demonstrating increased associations with long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes | Still regarded as the safest pain medication in pregnancy |
NSAIDs | 3rd trimester risk of premature closure of the ductus arteriosus. Possible association with spontaneous abortions 1st/2nd trimesters | No use in the 3rd trimester. Be aware of possible risk of spontaneous abortion in 1st trimester |
Opioids | May show risks of birth defects when used early in pregnancy. Neonatal abstinence syndrome when used in large amounts near delivery | Can use low dose, short-term prescriptions near delivery as absolute risk of neonatal abstinence syndrome is low |
Ketamine | Little data / unknown | Not currently an option other than consideration in refractory / severe conditions given lack of safety data |
Post by Bronwyn Finney, MD
Dr. Finney is a PGY-1 in Emergency Medicine at the University of Cincinnati
Editing by James Li, MD and Ryan LaFollette, MD
Dr. Li is a PGY-4 and Chief Resident in Emergency Medicine at the University of Cincinnati. Dr. LaFollette is an Assistant Program Director at UC and Co-Editor of TamingtheSRU
References
Vladutiu CJ, Stringer EM, Kandasamy V, Ruppenkamp J, Menard MK. Emergency Care Utilization Among Pregnant Medicaid Recipients in North Carolina: An Analysis Using Linked Claims and Birth Records. Matern Child Health J. 2019;23(2):265-276. doi:10.1007/s10995-018-2651-6
Black E, Khor KE, Kennedy D, et al. Medication Use and Pain Management in Pregnancy: A Critical Review. Pain Practice. 2019;19(8):875-899. doi:10.1111/papr.12814
Werler MM, Mitchell AA, Hernandez-Diaz S, Honein MA, the National Birth Defects Prevention Study. Use of over-the-counter medications during pregnancy. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. 2005;193(3):771-777. doi:10.1016/j.ajog.2005.02.100
Bateman BT, Hernandez-Diaz S, Rathmell JP, et al. Patterns of opioid utilization in pregnancy in a large cohort of commercial insurance beneficiaries in the United States. Anesthesiology. 2014;120(5):1216-1224. doi:10.1097/ALN.0000000000000172
Liew Z, Ritz B, Rebordosa C, Lee P-C, Olsen J. Acetaminophen Use During Pregnancy, Behavioral Problems, and Hyperkinetic Disorders. JAMA Pediatrics. 2014;168(4):313-320. doi:10.1001/jamapediatrics.2013.4914
Brandlistuen RE, Ystrom E, Nulman I, Koren G, Nordeng H. Prenatal paracetamol exposure and child neurodevelopment: a sibling-controlled cohort study. Int J Epidemiol. 2013;42(6):1702-1713. doi:10.1093/ije/dyt183
Daniel S, Koren G, Lunenfeld E, Bilenko N, Ratzon R, Levy A. Fetal exposure to nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and spontaneous abortions. CMAJ. 2014;186(5):E177-E182. doi:10.1503/cmaj.130605
Nakhai-Pour HR, Broy P, Sheehy O, Bérard A. Use of nonaspirin nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs during pregnancy and the risk of spontaneous abortion. CMAJ. 2011;183(15):1713-1720. doi:10.1503/cmaj.110454
Broussard CS, Rasmussen SA, Reefhuis J, et al. Maternal treatment with opioid analgesics and risk for birth defects. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. 2011;204(4):314.e1-314.e11. doi:10.1016/j.ajog.2010.12.039
Desai RJ, Huybrechts KF, Hernandez-Diaz S, et al. Exposure to prescription opioid analgesics in utero and risk of neonatal abstinence syndrome: population based cohort study. BMJ. 2015;350. doi:10.1136/bmj.h2102
Interrante JD, Ailes EC, Lind JN, et al. Risk comparison for prenatal use of analgesics and selected birth defects, National Birth Defects Prevention Study 1997–2011. Annals of Epidemiology. 2017;27(10):645-653.e2. doi:10.1016/j.annepidem.2017.09.003
Gimovsky AC, Fritton K, Viscusi E, Roman A. Evaluating the Use of Ketamine for Pain Control With Sickle Cell Crisis in Pregnancy: A Report of 2 Cases. A & A Case Reports. 2018;10(1):20-22. doi:10.1213/XAA.0000000000000624
Research C for DE and. FDA Drug Safety Communication: FDA has reviewed possible risks of pain medicine use during pregnancy. FDA. Published online February 9, 2019. Accessed October 17, 2020. https://www.fda.gov/drugs/drug-safety-and-availability/fda-drug-safety-communication-fda-has-reviewed-possible-risks-pain-medicine-use-during-pregnancy
Prenatal acetaminophen use and outcomes in children. American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology. 2017;216(3):B14-B15. doi:10.1016/j.ajog.2017.01.021
Bridwell, R. E., MD, Koyfman, A., MD, & Long, B., MD, FACEP. (july 2020). Ch. 14- Pain in Pregnancy. In Pain Management Guide (1st ed., Vol. 1). Emergency Medicine Residents' Association. https://www.emra.org/books/pain-management/Introduction/