Wednesday, 17 October 2012

Bendectin Birth Defects

Bendectin Birth Defects
"Bendectin" (Doxylamine/Dicyclomine/Pyridoxine) was widely used for the treatment of nausea and vomiting of pregnancy until 1983, when production was discontinued in the face of lawsuits alleging that the drug caused congenital malformations. We have conducted a meta-analysis of the 16 cohort and 11 case-control studies that report birth defects from Bendectin-exposed pregnancies. This meta-analysis provides an estimate of the relative risk of malformation at birth in association with Bendectin exposure. The pooled estimate of the relative risk of any malformation at birth in association with exposure to Bendectin in the first trimester was 0.95 (95% Cl 0.88 to 1.04). Separate analyses were undertaken for cardiac defects, central nervous system defects, neural tube defects, limb reductions, oral clefts, and genital tract malformations. In these categories, the pooled estimates of relative risk ranged from 0.81 for oral clefts to 1.11 for limb reductions, with all 95% confidence intervals enclosing unity.

Bendectin Birth Defects


Bendectin Birth Defects


Bendectin Birth Defects


Bendectin Birth Defects


Bendectin Birth Defects


Bendectin Birth Defects


Bendectin Birth Defects


Bendectin Birth Defects
1960 Birth Defects images.publicradio.org

Bendectin Birth Defects

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