Abstract:
Research involving human subjects must be performed with
standards that promote protection of their rights. Several codes were
developed and all are unanimous in the following ethic principles:
respect for persons, beneficence and justice. The fulfilment of these
principles will assure that the dignity, rights, safety and well-being of
the participants in a biomedical research are guaranteed.
The need of a special protection to those with diminished autonomy
is a common requirement to all codes. Pregnant women are defined as
a vulnerable population because of the potential risk of harm of the
foetus. Apart from the foetal risk, pregnant women in developing
countries have additional potential for vulnerability, as in most of the
cases they are economically or/and educationally disadvantaged
individuals. Their generally low level of education may put them in a
difficult situation to fully understand consent forms and the risk-benefit
assessment provided by the researchers.
In recent years, the evidence-based medicine has been an
important international goal. Mechanisms to support the use of
research-based evidence in developing health policy are being
promoted. The research must be sensitive to the potential for
vulnerability when designing evidence-based trials and they have to
assure that the vulnerable population are being protected.
13With the intention to protect the vulnerable population, some groups
such as pregnant women have being traditionally excluded from clinical
trials. As a result of this exclusion, pregnant women are being exposed
to medicines in situations where no evidence-based information is
available on efficacy and safety. They are deprived of the benefits of
treatment in order to be protected themselves and their offspring from
an unknown risk. Although is very clear that protection of a vulnerable
population, particularly the pregnant women, is mandatory in the
design of any trial, the challenges of the implementation of this
principle should be taken into account in order to not increase the gap
between the introduction of a pharmaceutical product in the market and
the availability of safety information for its use in pregnancy.
In developing countries maternal mortality is an important public
health problem. Most maternal deaths occur in the poorest countries
particularly in Sub-Saharan Africa. In Mozambique the rate could be
between 408-1000 per 100 000 live births according to the source of
information. Several studies have addressed different causes of
maternal mortality in Africa, eclampsia and malaria being part of the
five most reported.
There is strong evidence of the effectiveness of magnesium
sulphate (MGSO4) in women with pre-eclampsia and eclampsia but the
drug is not available in some countries. The example of MgSO4 has
14being used to describe failure in translating results of research into
policy and/or practice.
For malaria treatment few drugs were considered effective and safe
for use during pregnancy including chloroquine, sulphadoxine-
pyrimethamine and quinine. The information on safety comes from a
long experience of use. The emergency of resistance of P. falciparum
to these drugs is limiting its use in most of endemic areas. The
artemisinin derivatives are being strongly recommended to be used in
combination with other antimalarial drugs. Preclinical studies have
consistently shown that artemisinin and its derivatives are embryolethal
and teratogenic in animals. Current available information is not
adequate to extrapolate the results in animals to humans.
Limited data on the safety profile of antimalarial drugs during
pregnancy is a challenge. Nowadays these drugs are used in pregnant
women based on retrospective cumulative risk-benefit assessment.
Mechanisms of prospectively monitoring the drugs use are required to
protect pregnant women from the potential risk.
The aim of this thesis is to describe the (un)availability of drugs and
their reasons, as well as, the (un)availability of safety information on
drugs needed to be used during pregnancy in Southern Africa, and to
propose mechanisms to effectively monitor drug safety in pregnancy in
developing countries.
15In order to achieve this objective four studies were performed. In
the first study a qualitative case-study based on interviews and
bibliographic review was performed in Mozambique and Zimbabwe.
Factors affecting the (un)availability of MgSO4 were assessed. This
study showed that research evidence regarding the effectiveness of
MgSO4 for the treatment of eclampsia and pre-eclampsia, was widely
known in the study countries. However, the registration, approval,
acquisition and distribution of MgSO4, and hence its availability to
clinicians, was affected by market and systems failures. With this study
we concluded that the low cost of magnesium sulphate, as well as the
mechanisms through which it is procured, means that market forces
alone cannot be relied upon to ensure its availability. Governments and
international organizations must be prepared to intervene to ensure the
wide availability of low cost, effective drugs critical to improving public
health in Africa.
The second and the third studies shown that antimalarial drugs are
being used in pregnant women even without information on its safety
profile in this particular group. Robust safety monitoring systems are
clearly needed in developing countries to accompany the deployment
of new drugs, especially those with a potential teratogenic risk.
The fourth study showed that spontaneous reporting system may
be a tool for drug safety monitoring. This system could be used to
increase health care providers’ and patients’ awareness of possible
16ADRs, and to develop a culture to report these reactions. Spontaneous
reporting and pregnancy registries were presented as examples of
mechanisms that could and should be in place. Recommendations on
how these systems could be effectively implemented in resource
constrained countries were also presented.
All these studies suggest that the definition of vulnerability of
pregnant women in developing countries should not be restricted to the
potential risk of harm of the foetus (harm-based definition) or to the
difficulty of fully understanding consent forms (consent-based
definitions). Women are also vulnerable because of the high risk of
dying from any cause related to or aggravated by the pregnancy. The
implementation of these ethic principles need to take into account the
urgent need to implement effective and safe drugs targeted to reduce
the burden of maternal morbidity and mortality.