Widely used diabetes drug linked to birth defects risk -study
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[March 29, 2022]
By Jennifer Rigby
(Reuters) - One of the world's most widely
prescribed diabetes drugs may be linked to major birth defects in the
offspring of male patients who were taking it ahead of the babies being
conceived, according to a new study from Denmark released on Monday.
Metformin, among the most common and often initially prescribed
treatments for type 2 diabetes, was associated with a 1.4 times greater
risk of birth defects in boys whose fathers were taking the drug
compared with those born to fathers who were not, researchers from the
University of Southern Denmark and Stanford University in the United
States found.
In both groups, the mothers had no history of diabetes or hypertension.
The study's authors, as well as independent experts, pointed to several
key limitations of the data published in the Annals of Internal
Medicine.
Researchers did not know whether the fathers took the medication as
prescribed, or if they had worse control of their diabetes, which could
also be linked to a higher risk of birth defects. The study showed that
the risk for babies born to men taking insulin rather than metformin
were not increased.
Channa Jayasena, head of andrology at Imperial College London, who was
not involved in the work, called the results "thought-provoking but
inconclusive".
"Men with diabetes should not be dissuaded from taking metformin, but
this is worth looking at more closely," he added.
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Metformin, available as a generic
drug, is a first-line treatment for type 2 diabetes, a growing
epidemic worldwide.
It is usually prescribed when diet and physical activity are not
enough to control blood sugar levels and typically before more
expensive branded diabetes drugs. It works to improve how the body
handles insulin. Around 120 million people have been prescribed the
drug across the globe.
In the study of 1,116,779 births in Denmark from 1997 to 2016, the
researchers found that 5.2% of babies born to men who had been
taking metformin had birth defects, particularly genital defects in
boys. Among the rest of the population, the rate was 3.3%.
Babies were considered to be exposed to a diabetes drug, including
metformin or insulin, if the father had filled at least one
prescription during the three months before conception, when the
fertilizing sperm were developing.
The researchers said more study was needed, but suggested that men
taking metformin consider switching to another treatment when trying
to conceive.
"If patients would like to switch to an alternative, they should
contact their doctor," Maarten Wensink, a public health professor at
the University of Southern Denmark and a study author, told Reuters,
adding that the best treatment for type 2 diabetes remains lifestyle
interventions such as dietary changes and weight loss.
"This could be an extra reason to put more priority on paternal
health," he added.
(Reporting by Jennifer Rigby, Editing by Michele Gershberg and Bill
Berkrot)
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