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Eleven babies die after Dutch women given Viagra-like drug in trial

 

The death of 11 babies born to women who were given sildenafil during a drug trial has led to the end of the experiment and an anxious wait for other mothers involved.

The trial was designed to test whether the medication could help boost babies’ growth in the womb.The research was carried out at 10 hospitals across theNetherlands and involved women whose placentas had been underperforming.

The hope, backed up by experimental research on rats, had been that the drug would encourage a better flow of blood through the placenta, promoting the growth of the child.

The women taking part in the trial all had unborn babies whose growth had been severely limited in the womb. The children’s prognosis, given a lack of available therapy, was regarded as poor as a result.

The trial was ended when an independent committee overseeing the research discovered that more babies than expected were being born with lung problems.

In total, 93 women were given the drug as part of the trial, led by Amsterdam University Medical Centre. Seventeen babies developed lung problems, and 11 have since died. A further eight babies in the trial died of unrelated conditions.

Of the 90 women in a control group who took a placebo, three had children who developed the same lung issues, but no babies died from conditions that could be linked to the Viagra. Nine babies died from unrelated problems.

Between 10 and 15 women are waiting to find out if their child has been affected by the drug. It is feared that the drug caused high blood pressure in the lungs, leading to the babies receiving too little oxygen. There is nothing to suggest the trial was mishandled.

In an interview with the Dutch daily newspaper De Volkskrant, the leader of the research, Wessel Ganzevoort, a gynecologist, said: “We wanted to show that this is an effective way to promote the growth of the baby. But the opposite happened. I am shocked. The last thing you want is to harm patients.”

“We have already notified Canadian researchers who are conducting a similar study. In any case, they have temporarily stopped their research.”

The research began in 2015 and was due to run until 2020, with the participation of 350 patients.

“The researchers found no positive effect for the children on other outcomes. All adverse effects occurred after birth…

Based on these findings, the study stopped immediately. All participants were approached personally and almost everyone was informed and know by now whether they have taken the drug or the placebo.”

A trial in the UK, from which results were published last December, offered no convincing evidence either way to the drug’s efficacy or suggested there was any risk to patients.

“In the Netherlands, doctors are reasonably cautious. The effectiveness and safety of a drug must first be rigorously demonstrated through placebo-controlled studies before we prescribe it. That has only been demonstrated once again.”

 

Source : The Guardian

 

By Gilles Riera.

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