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Asthma in pregnancy and lactation

Christine F McDonald
Med J Aust 1996; 165 (9): 485-488.
Published online: 4 November 1996

Position Statement

Asthma in pregnancy and lactation
A position paper for the Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand

Christine F McDonald and Jonathan G W Burdon

MJA 1996; 165: 485-488


This position statement was developed as a consensus view between the two authors and was subsequently reviewed by the Education and Research Sub-Committee of the Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand, whose membership comprises six respiratory physicians with a broad range of interests in research and clinical respiratory medicine. This Committee also sought the opinion of an external reviewer with expertise in the subject. The following conclusions were reached:
  • Physiological changes which occur during pregnancy may affect asthma control.
  • Regular monitoring (monthly or every six weeks) of asthmatic women should occur throughout pregnancy.
  • Regular therapy, including the use of inhaled steroids, is recommended.
  • Well-controlled asthma should have no adverse effects on pregnancy, labour or breastfeeding.
  • Medicines used to control asthma carry less risk to the mother and baby than a severe attack of asthma.
  • Good asthma management will result in a birth outcome similar to that experienced by women without asthma.

Introduction Pregnant women with asthma should be reassured that their asthma medication carries less risk to the fetus than a severe asthma attack. Inadequately treated asthma can cause maternal and fetal hypoxaemia, which leads to complications during pregnancy and poorer birth outcomes. Here, we outline the effects of asthma on pregnancy (and vice versa) and the management of asthma during pregnancy and the postpartum period.


Literature search We searched the literature, using the MEDLINE database, for the period 1985-1995 and the keywords "asthma" and "pregnancy". Standard textbooks on asthma were also reviewed. A total of 146 papers were identified and other papers contained within their references were also reviewed. Thirty-three papers were found suitable.



Effects of pregnancy on asthma
Although bronchial hyperresponsiveness lessens during mid-pregnancy,1 studies reporting changes in asthma severity during pregnancy show widely differing results.2-5 Overall, the data indicate that the clinical severity of asthma during pregnancy improves in about 30% of women, remains stable in about 50% and worsens in about 20%.6

Factors responsible for the variation in asthma severity during pregnancy include an increase in circulating free cortisol,7,8 a decrease in bronchomotor tone and an increase in serum concentrations of cyclic adenosine monophosphate.8 These changes would normally improve the asthma, but in pregnancy other competing factors, including exposure to fetal antigens and alterations in cell-mediated immunity, may worsen asthma symptoms.8 Asthma may be further complicated by sinusitis and rhinitis, which occur in about 35% of pregnant women, but vascular dilatation and congestion of the mucosa of the upper respiratory tract (vasomotor rhinitis of pregnancy) does not involve the lower airways.9

The physiological respiratory changes which occur during pregnancy may affect asthma control (Box). Changes in blood gases secondary to acute asthma will be superimposed on the physiological respiratory alkalosis of pregnancy. Therefore, a normal or elevated PCO2 associated with acute asthma will indicate respiratory compromise of greater severity in pregnancy than in the non-pregnant state. The dyspnoea of pregnancy must be differentiated from dyspnoea caused by asthma. Indeed, patients who develop asthma during pregnancy may wrongly attribute dyspnoea to the pregnancy, which can lead to undermedication and severe maternal and fetal hypoxaemia.

It is difficult to predict which women will experience worsening of their asthma during pregnancy, but the severity of the condition before pregnancy,2,8 and an absence of the expected decrease in IgE concentration during pregnancy,8,13 should alert the clinician to this possibility. If asthma is going to worsen, it will usually do so between 24 and 36 weeks' gestation. Symptoms are likely to be less troublesome in the peripartum period. In most women, asthma severity returns to the prepregnant state within three months of delivery,1,5 but in rare cases it may be worse than before the pregnancy.



Effects of asthma on pregnancy
The fetus exists in a precarious state of oxygenation and is dependent for its oxygen supply on maternal arterial oxygen content, venous return and cardiac output, and uterine artery and placental bloodflow. Compensating mechanisms of the fetus to combat potentially adverse conditions of oxygenation include a haemoglobin level of at least 16 g/dL and a P50 of 22 mmHg (indicating a left shift in the oxyhaemoglobin dissociation curve).

Poorly controlled asthma or severe asthma attacks further threaten the fetus because of increased maternal hypoxaemia and diminution of uterine artery bloodflow secondary to hypocapnic vasoconstriction. These women have an increased incidence of low birthweight and premature babies, neonatal hypoxia, complications during labour, and perinatal and maternal mortality.14-17 Hyperemesis gravidarum, maternal haemorrhage and pre-eclampsia are more common in this group.14

For these reasons, it has been argued that a pregnancy complicated by asthma should be regarded as a high risk pregnancy.16 However, the babies of most asthmatic women (i.e., those with well controlled asthma) show no difference in birthweight, Apgar scores or rates of congenital malformation when compared with those of non-asthmatic mothers.5,15,16



Management of asthma in pregnancy
The management of asthma during pregnancy is similar to that at any other time: treatment should be aggressive, with the aim of eliminating symptoms and restoring and maintaining normal lung function. Guidelines for asthma management have been published by the National Asthma Campaign and are highly recommended.18 Cooperation between the respiratory physician and obstetrician is important throughout pregnancy for women with severe asthma.



Pharmacological therapy
Care should be taken with pharmacological therapy during pregnancy, particularly in the first trimester, when the risk of congenital defects is greatest. Fortunately, the medicines currently used in the treatment of asthma have been found in practice to have a good safety profile during pregnancy. The drug categories listed here are those of the Australian Drug Evaluation Committee's categorisation of risk of drug use in pregnancy.19

Bronchospasm relaxants
β2-Agonists (category A): There is no evidence of a teratogenic risk with the commonly used inhaled β2-agonists salbutamol, terbutaline and fenoterol. Intravenous salbutamol may be used to delay the onset of labour in some circumstances and there is a theoretical risk that oral β2-agonists could also have this effect. Delayed labour does not occur with bronchodilators administered by metered-dose inhaler or wet nebulisation.

Ipratropium bromide (category B1): Although there is less experience with this drug, it appears to be safe for use during pregnancy, as it is poorly absorbed when administered by the inhaled route and has not been identified as imparting an increased risk of fetal malformations.

Salmeterol (category B3): These newer long-acting agents have not been tested extensively in pregnant women.

Theopyllines (category A): The use of theophyllines remains controversial. They may aggravate the nausea and reflux suffered by some pregnant women and can cause transient neonatal tachycardia and irritability.20,21 Teratogenicity has been shown in animals,22,23 and there are occasional case reports of cardiovascular abnormalities in humans.24 However, larger human studies have not shown any significant increase in fetal abnormalities.25,26

It has been suggested that theophyllines be withheld during the first trimester.26 If they are used, serum theophylline levels should be measured as drug metabolism may alter during pregnancy.

Preventive inhalations and aerosols
Sodium cromoglycate (category A): This drug appears to have no adverse fetal effects.

Nedocromil sodium (category B1): Animal studies have not shown any teratogenic effects, but, as with all new drugs, care should be exercised, especially in the first trimester.

Inhaled corticosteroids
Beclomethasone and budesonide (category B3): These are the mainstay of treatment in moderate to severe asthma and both appear to have a good safety profile in pregnancy. Although beclomethasone is a known animal teratogen, its use in pregnant women has not been associated with teratogenicity. The largest human experience of inhaled corticosteroids is with beclomethasone and it is therefore the inhaled steroid of choice in pregnancy.9

Less information is available on the use of budesonide in pregnancy as it is a newer drug. If moderate to severe asthma is well controlled with budesonide, the risks of destabilising the condition by changing from budesonide to beclomethasone must be weighed against the potential benefits of using a medicine which has been more extensively studied.

Fluticasone (category B3): Experience with this drug in pregnancy is more limited.

Oral corticosteroids
(Category A) These are sometimes necessary for severe asthma in pregnancy but usually only for short periods. An increased risk of cleft palate and placental abnormalities has been reported in animals given huge doses of oral steroids.27,28 These abnormalities have not been reported in humans, and the results of animal studies should not deter the practising clinician from using oral corticosteroids if required.

Methotrexate and other steroid-sparing agents have an occasional role in the treatment of some individuals with severe resistant asthma. However, these drugs are contraindicated in women of childbearing age who are trying to conceive or who are pregnant.


Labour There is no increase in the induction of labour, use of forceps or emergency caesarean sections in women with asthma, but elective caesarean sections are more common. Women with very severe asthma may be advised to have an elective caesarean section at a time when their asthma control is good. Close cooperation between the respiratory physician, obstetrician and anaesthetist is particularly important at this time.

Symptoms of asthma during labour are generally easily controlled with standard asthma therapy. Acute asthma attacks in labour are rare, but prostaglandin F2alpha (Dinoprost, UpJohn) and ergometrine cause bronchoconstriction. Their use in the induction of labour, the initiation of the third stage of labour and for placental separation should be avoided.29 There is no evidence that oxytocin causes bronchoconstriction.


Breastfeeding Breastfeeding should be continued in women with asthma as breast milk confers some immunity to infection to the baby, especially to respiratory and gastrointestinal infections.

Breast milk may contain very small amounts of the drugs used to treat asthma, but, in general, these are not known to be harmful to the infant. Corticosteroids are about 90% protein bound in the blood and are not secreted into breast milk in any significant quantity. However, the manufacturers of budesonide have recommended discontinuation of this drug during lactation because of an absence of information regarding its transmission into breast milk. The decision to alter a successful medication regimen that is controlling the mother's asthma must be weighed against any potential detrimental effects to the infant from continuation of the drug.

Although less than 1% of maternal theophylline is transferred to the infant,30 it has been suggested that women breastfeed their baby before taking this drug to minimise its side effects.31

It is recommended that tetracycline antibiotics and iodine-containing mixtures be avoided in pregnant and lactating women as they may cause dental discoloration and goitre in the baby.



Patient education
Environmental trigger factors which cause deterioration in asthma control or may lead to acute asthma attacks must be avoided and pregnant women should be urged to stop smoking. Mothers should be advised about the importance of avoiding exposure to allergens and environmental tobacco smoke in the first years of their child's life to reduce the potential for later asthma development.32


Monitoring Women with asthma should be reviewed at least every four to six weeks (and more frequently if needed) so that early changes in respiratory function can be detected and treated expeditiously. Although formal spirometry may be indicated from time to time, lung function can be easily monitored at home with a peak flow meter.33 The doctor should formulate an asthma action plan with the patient, to be put into effect if her condition deteriorates.33

If a woman with asthma is closely monitored, pregnancy outcomes approaching those of the general population can be expected.34 Well-controlled asthma should have no adverse effect on pregnancy, labour or breastfeeding.


References
  1. Juniper EF, Daniel EE, Roberts RS, et al. Improvement in airway responsiveness and asthma severity during pregnancy. A prospective study. Am Rev Respir Dis 1989; 140: 924-931.
  2. Williams DA. Asthma and pregnancy. Acta Allergol 1967; 22: 311-323.
  3. Turner ES, Greenberger PA, Patterson R. Management of the pregnant asthmatic patient. Ann Intern Med 1980; 93: 905-919.
  4. Greenberger PA, Patterson R. Management of asthma during pregnancy. N Engl J Med 1985; 312: 897-902.
  5. Schatz M, Harden K, Forsythe A, et al. The course of asthma during pregnancy, post-partum and with successive pregnancies: a prospective analysis. J Allergy Clin Immunol 1988; 81: 509-517.
  6. Burdon JGW, Goss G. Asthma and pregnancy. Aust N Z J Med 1994; 24: 3-4.
  7. Nolten WE, Rueckert PA. Elevated free cortisol index in pregnancy: possible regulatory mechanisms. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1981; 139: 492-498.
  8. Gluck JC, Gluck PA. The effects of pregnancy on asthma: a prospective study. Ann Allergy 1976; 37: 164-168.
  9. National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute. Report of the Working Group on Asthma and Pregnancy. Executive Summary: Management of asthma during pregnancy. J Allergy Clin Immunol 1994; 93: 139-162.
  10. Prowse CM, Gaensler EA. Respiratory and acid-base changes during pregnancy. Anesthesiology 1965; 26: 381-392.
  11. Rees GB, Pipkin KB, Symonds EM, et al. A longitudinal study of respiratory changes in normal human pregnancy with cross sectional data on subjects with pregnancy-induced hypertension. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1990; 162: 826-830.
  12. Gee JBL, Packer BS, Millen JE, et al. Pulmonary mechanics in pregnancy. J Clin Invest 1967; 46: 945-952.
  13. Gazioglu K, Kaltreider NL, Rosen M, et al. Pulmonary function during pregnancy in normal women and patients with cardiopulmonary disease. Thorax 1970; 25: 445-450.
  14. Hernandez E, Angell CS, Johnson JW. Asthma in pregnancy: current concepts. Obstet Gynecol 1980; 55: 739-743.
  15. Gordon M, Niswander KR, Berendes H, et al. Fetal morbidity following potentially anoxigenic obstetric conditions. VII. Bronchial asthma. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1970; 106: 421-429.
  16. Bahna SL, Bjerkedal T. The course and outcome of pregnancy in women with bronchial asthma. Acta Allergol 1972; 27: 397-406.
  17. Fitzsimons R, Greenberger PA, Patterson R. Outcome of pregnancy in women requiring corticosteroids for severe asthma. J Allergy Clin Immunol 1986; 78: 349-353.
  18. National Asthma Campaign. Asthma Management Handbook. Melbourne: National Asthma Campaign Ltd, 1993.
  19. Australian Drug Evaluation Committee. Medicines in Pregnancy. 3rd ed. Commonwealth Department of Health and Family Services, 1996.
  20. 20. Yeh TF, Pildes RS. Transplacental aminophylline toxicity in a neonate [letter]. Lancet 1977; 1: 910.
  21. Labovitz E, Spector S. Placental theophylline transfer in pregnant asthmatics. JAMA 1982; 247: 786-788.
  22. Gilbert EF, Bruyere HJ, Ishikawa S, et al. The effect of methylxanthines on catecholamine-stimulated and normal chick embryos. Teratology 1977; 16: 47-52.
  23. Ishikawa S, Gilbert EF, Bruyere HJ, et al. Aortic aneurysms associated with cardiac defects in theophylline-stimulated chick embryos. Teratology 1978; 18: 23-30.
  24. Park JM, Schmer V, Myers TM. Cardiovascular anomalies associated with prenatal exposure to theophylline. South Med J 1990; 83: 1487-1488.
  25. Schatz M. Asthma during pregnancy: interrelationships and management. Ann Allergy 1992; 68: 123-133.
  26. Stenius-Aarniala B, Riikonen S, Teramo K. Slow-release theophylline in pregnant asthmatics. Chest 1995; 107: 642-647.
  27. Fainstat T. Cortisone-induced congenital cleft palate in rabbits. Endocrinology 1954; 55: 502-508.
  28. Blackburn WR, Kaplan HS, McKay DG. Morphologic changes in the developing rat placenta following prednisolone administration. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1963; 92: 234-246.
  29. Math AA, Hedqvist P. Effect of prostaglandins F2 and E2 on airway conductance in healthy subjects and asthmatic patients. Am Rev Respir Dis 1975; 111: 313-320.
  30. Yurchak AM, Jusko WJ. Theophylline secretion into breast milk. Pediatrics 1979; 57: 518-525.
  31. Berkowitz R, Coustan DR, Mochizuki TK. Handbook for prescribing medications during pregnancy. 2nd ed. Boston: Little, Brown and Co, 1986.
  32. Peak JK. Prevention of asthma. Eur Respir J 1996; 9: 1545-1555.
  33. The Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand. Peak flow meter use in asthma management. Med J Aust 1996; 164: 727-730.
  34. Stenius-Aarniala B, Piilrila P, Teramo K. Asthma and pregnancy: a prospective study of 198 pregnancies. Thorax 1988; 43: 12-18.

Authors'
details
Department of Respiratory Medicine, Austin and Repatriation Medical Centre, Heidelberg, VIC.
Christine F McDonald, PhD, FRACP, Consultant Respiratory Physician.

Department of Respiratory Medicine, St Vincent's Hospital, Melbourne, VIC.
Jonathan G W Burdon, MD, FRACP, Consultant Respiratory Physician.

Reprints: Dr J G W Burdon, Director, Department of Respiratory Medicine, St Vincent's Hospital, 41 Victoria Parade, Fitzroy, VIC 3065.




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Physiological respiratory changes in pregnancy

Dyspnoea
Dyspnoea is experienced by 60%-70% of women at some time during pregnancy,10 most commonly in the first or second trimester. Mechanical factors do not seem to play a major role in its pathogenesis because it frequently occurs before any increase in abdominal girth. Early pregnancy: Dyspnoea may be caused by rising circulating maternal progesterone levels, which result in a progressive increase in minute ventilation of up to 40% by the end of the first trimester, largely as a result of increases in tidal volume.11 Late pregnancy: Dyspnoea later in pregnancy is (likely to be) caused by a combination of the hyperventilation of pregnancy and restriction due to uterine enlargement. The latter leads to a small reduction in both residual volume and functional residual capacity, while total lung capacity is maintained by an increase in inspiratory capacity.12,13 Changes in peak flow rates and forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) are small and of no clinical significance.1,13
Respiratory alkalosis
Maternal gas exchange is mildly disordered as a result of the increase in minute ventilation.11 A slight rise in arterial oxygen tension, a change in carbon dioxide tension and pH changes are common and indicate a mild respiratory alkalosis. The changes in arterial blood gas tensions occur despite increases in oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide production in the last few months of pregnancy.11

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