Asthma medication prescribing before, during and after pregnancy: A study in seven European regions

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Asthma medication prescribing before, during and after pregnancy : A study in seven European regions. / Charlton, Rachel A; Pierini, Anna; Klungsøyr, Kari; Neville, Amanda J; Jordan, Sue E.; de Jong-van den Berg, Lolkje T W; Thayer, Daniel; Jens Bos, H.; Puccini, Aurora; Hansen, Anne V.; Gini, Rosa; Engeland, Anders; Andersen, Anne Marie Nybo; Dolk, Helen; Garne, Ester.

In: BMJ Open, Vol. 6, No. 1, e009237, 2016, p. 1-14.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Charlton, RA, Pierini, A, Klungsøyr, K, Neville, AJ, Jordan, SE, de Jong-van den Berg, LTW, Thayer, D, Jens Bos, H, Puccini, A, Hansen, AV, Gini, R, Engeland, A, Andersen, AMN, Dolk, H & Garne, E 2016, 'Asthma medication prescribing before, during and after pregnancy: A study in seven European regions', BMJ Open, vol. 6, no. 1, e009237, pp. 1-14. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009237

APA

Charlton, R. A., Pierini, A., Klungsøyr, K., Neville, A. J., Jordan, S. E., de Jong-van den Berg, L. T. W., Thayer, D., Jens Bos, H., Puccini, A., Hansen, A. V., Gini, R., Engeland, A., Andersen, A. M. N., Dolk, H., & Garne, E. (2016). Asthma medication prescribing before, during and after pregnancy: A study in seven European regions. BMJ Open, 6(1), 1-14. [e009237]. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009237

Vancouver

Charlton RA, Pierini A, Klungsøyr K, Neville AJ, Jordan SE, de Jong-van den Berg LTW et al. Asthma medication prescribing before, during and after pregnancy: A study in seven European regions. BMJ Open. 2016;6(1):1-14. e009237. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009237

Author

Charlton, Rachel A ; Pierini, Anna ; Klungsøyr, Kari ; Neville, Amanda J ; Jordan, Sue E. ; de Jong-van den Berg, Lolkje T W ; Thayer, Daniel ; Jens Bos, H. ; Puccini, Aurora ; Hansen, Anne V. ; Gini, Rosa ; Engeland, Anders ; Andersen, Anne Marie Nybo ; Dolk, Helen ; Garne, Ester. / Asthma medication prescribing before, during and after pregnancy : A study in seven European regions. In: BMJ Open. 2016 ; Vol. 6, No. 1. pp. 1-14.

Bibtex

@article{0f119355368f4428ac8f65cd59cb9ab9,
title = "Asthma medication prescribing before, during and after pregnancy: A study in seven European regions",
abstract = "Objectives: To explore utilisation patterns of asthma medication before, during and after pregnancy as recorded in seven European population-based databases. Design: A descriptive drug utilisation study. Setting: 7 electronic healthcare databases in Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, Italy (Emilia Romagna and Tuscany), Wales, and the Clinical Practice Research Datalink representing the rest of the UK. Participants: All women with a pregnancy ending in a delivery that started and ended between 2004 and 2010, who had been present in the database for the year before, throughout and the year following pregnancy. Main outcome measures: The percentage of deliveries where the woman received an asthma medicine prescription, based on prescriptions issued (UK) or dispensed (non-UK), during the year before, throughout or during the year following pregnancy. Asthma medicine prescribing patterns were described for 3-month time periods and the choice of asthma medicine and changes in prescribing over the study period were evaluated in each database. Results: In total, 1 165 435 deliveries were identified. The prevalence of asthma medication prescribing during pregnancy was highest in the UK and Wales databases (9.4% (CI959.3% to 9.6%) and 9.4% (CI959.1% to 9.6%), respectively) and lowest in the Norwegian database (3.7% (CI953.7% to 3.8%)). In the year before pregnancy, the prevalence of asthma medication prescribing remained constant in all regions. Prescribing levels peaked during the second trimester of pregnancy and were at their lowest during the 3-month period following delivery. A decline was observed, in all regions except the UK, in the prescribing of long-Acting β-2-Agonists during pregnancy. During the 7-year study period, there were only small changes in prescribing patterns. Conclusions: Differences were found in the prevalence of prescribing of asthma medications during and surrounding pregnancy in Europe. Inhaled β-2 agonists and inhaled corticosteroids were, however, the most popular therapeutic regimens in all databases.",
author = "Charlton, {Rachel A} and Anna Pierini and Kari Klungs{\o}yr and Neville, {Amanda J} and Jordan, {Sue E.} and {de Jong-van den Berg}, {Lolkje T W} and Daniel Thayer and {Jens Bos}, H. and Aurora Puccini and Hansen, {Anne V.} and Rosa Gini and Anders Engeland and Andersen, {Anne Marie Nybo} and Helen Dolk and Ester Garne",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009237",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
pages = "1--14",
journal = "BMJ Open",
issn = "2044-6055",
publisher = "BMJ Publishing Group",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Asthma medication prescribing before, during and after pregnancy

T2 - A study in seven European regions

AU - Charlton, Rachel A

AU - Pierini, Anna

AU - Klungsøyr, Kari

AU - Neville, Amanda J

AU - Jordan, Sue E.

AU - de Jong-van den Berg, Lolkje T W

AU - Thayer, Daniel

AU - Jens Bos, H.

AU - Puccini, Aurora

AU - Hansen, Anne V.

AU - Gini, Rosa

AU - Engeland, Anders

AU - Andersen, Anne Marie Nybo

AU - Dolk, Helen

AU - Garne, Ester

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Objectives: To explore utilisation patterns of asthma medication before, during and after pregnancy as recorded in seven European population-based databases. Design: A descriptive drug utilisation study. Setting: 7 electronic healthcare databases in Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, Italy (Emilia Romagna and Tuscany), Wales, and the Clinical Practice Research Datalink representing the rest of the UK. Participants: All women with a pregnancy ending in a delivery that started and ended between 2004 and 2010, who had been present in the database for the year before, throughout and the year following pregnancy. Main outcome measures: The percentage of deliveries where the woman received an asthma medicine prescription, based on prescriptions issued (UK) or dispensed (non-UK), during the year before, throughout or during the year following pregnancy. Asthma medicine prescribing patterns were described for 3-month time periods and the choice of asthma medicine and changes in prescribing over the study period were evaluated in each database. Results: In total, 1 165 435 deliveries were identified. The prevalence of asthma medication prescribing during pregnancy was highest in the UK and Wales databases (9.4% (CI959.3% to 9.6%) and 9.4% (CI959.1% to 9.6%), respectively) and lowest in the Norwegian database (3.7% (CI953.7% to 3.8%)). In the year before pregnancy, the prevalence of asthma medication prescribing remained constant in all regions. Prescribing levels peaked during the second trimester of pregnancy and were at their lowest during the 3-month period following delivery. A decline was observed, in all regions except the UK, in the prescribing of long-Acting β-2-Agonists during pregnancy. During the 7-year study period, there were only small changes in prescribing patterns. Conclusions: Differences were found in the prevalence of prescribing of asthma medications during and surrounding pregnancy in Europe. Inhaled β-2 agonists and inhaled corticosteroids were, however, the most popular therapeutic regimens in all databases.

AB - Objectives: To explore utilisation patterns of asthma medication before, during and after pregnancy as recorded in seven European population-based databases. Design: A descriptive drug utilisation study. Setting: 7 electronic healthcare databases in Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, Italy (Emilia Romagna and Tuscany), Wales, and the Clinical Practice Research Datalink representing the rest of the UK. Participants: All women with a pregnancy ending in a delivery that started and ended between 2004 and 2010, who had been present in the database for the year before, throughout and the year following pregnancy. Main outcome measures: The percentage of deliveries where the woman received an asthma medicine prescription, based on prescriptions issued (UK) or dispensed (non-UK), during the year before, throughout or during the year following pregnancy. Asthma medicine prescribing patterns were described for 3-month time periods and the choice of asthma medicine and changes in prescribing over the study period were evaluated in each database. Results: In total, 1 165 435 deliveries were identified. The prevalence of asthma medication prescribing during pregnancy was highest in the UK and Wales databases (9.4% (CI959.3% to 9.6%) and 9.4% (CI959.1% to 9.6%), respectively) and lowest in the Norwegian database (3.7% (CI953.7% to 3.8%)). In the year before pregnancy, the prevalence of asthma medication prescribing remained constant in all regions. Prescribing levels peaked during the second trimester of pregnancy and were at their lowest during the 3-month period following delivery. A decline was observed, in all regions except the UK, in the prescribing of long-Acting β-2-Agonists during pregnancy. During the 7-year study period, there were only small changes in prescribing patterns. Conclusions: Differences were found in the prevalence of prescribing of asthma medications during and surrounding pregnancy in Europe. Inhaled β-2 agonists and inhaled corticosteroids were, however, the most popular therapeutic regimens in all databases.

U2 - 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009237

DO - 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009237

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 26787250

AN - SCOPUS:84960154625

VL - 6

SP - 1

EP - 14

JO - BMJ Open

JF - BMJ Open

SN - 2044-6055

IS - 1

M1 - e009237

ER -

ID: 178853363