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Doxylamine succinate–pyridoxine hydrochloride (Diclegis) for the management of nausea and vomiting in pregnancy: an overview

Authors Nuangchamnong N, Niebyl J

Received 22 November 2013

Accepted for publication 4 February 2014

Published 12 April 2014 Volume 2014:6 Pages 401—409

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/IJWH.S46653

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 4



Nina Nuangchamnong, Jennifer Niebyl

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa, IA, USA

Abstract: Nausea and vomiting in pregnancy (NVP) is common and often undertreated, in part due to fears of adverse effects of medications on the fetus during early pregnancy. In April 2013, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved doxylamine succinate 10 mg and pyridoxine hydrochloride (a vitamin B6 analog) 10 mg as a delayed-release combination pill called Diclegis for the treatment of NVP. Diclegis is currently the only medication that is FDA-approved for the indication of NVP. This review addresses the historical context, safety, efficacy, pharmacology, and practical role of doxylamine and pyridoxine for the management of NVP. The reintroduction of this doxylamine–pyridoxine combination pill into the American market fills a therapeutic gap in the management of NVP left by the removal of the same active drugs marketed over 30 years ago in the form of Bendectin. The substantial amount of safety data accumulated over the years makes it one of the few drugs that qualify for FDA Pregnancy Category A status. In the hierarchical approach to pharmacological treatment of NVP, the combination of doxylamine and pyridoxine should thus be first-tier.

Keywords: doxylamine, pyridoxine, vitamin B6, nausea, vomiting, pregnancy


Introduction

Nausea and vomiting in pregnancy (NVP) is common. A recent estimate of the prevalence of NVP in the US is 70%.1 A recent estimate of the total economic burden in the US in 2012, including drug treatments for mild-to-severe NVP, hospitalizations for hyperemesis gravidarum, time lost from work, and caregiver time, is $1.7 billion.2 Estimates of prevalence and economic burden due to NVP are similarly high in developing countries.3,4

NVP is a spectrum disorder. It is colloquially referred to as “morning sickness”, but in one study only 1.8% of women reported nausea limited to mornings alone, whereas 80% reported nausea lasting all day.5 Only 50% of women experienced relief by 14 weeks’ gestation; 90% of those affected had relief by 22 weeks’ gestation.5 In another study, about 25% of women had nausea alone, and 50% had both nausea and vomiting.6 Although NVP is generally considered part of a healthy pregnancy, the potential negative effect on the pregnant woman’s quality of life is significant.7,8 Approximately 1% of pregnant women develop a severe form of NVP called hyperemesis gravidarum with dehydration, weight loss, and ketonuria. Some cases of hyperemesis gravidarum may by avoided by aggressive early treatment of NVP.

The fear of potential teratogenicity necessitates a proven safe pharmacologic intervention for NVP during the vulnerable period of organogenesis. The period from onset to peak severity of NVP (from 8 to 10 weeks’ gestation)6 overlaps with the period of fetal organogenesis (from 4 to 10 weeks’ gestation). The etiology of NVP is unknown, but there is a close temporal relationship between peak human chorionic gonadotropin concentrations and peak symptoms of NVP, so human chorionic gonadotropin has been considered a likely candidate for the emetogenic stimulus arising from the placenta.9 Interestingly, NVP itself has not been observed to be associated with an increased risk of birth defects.10

Many dietary and pharmacologic treatment regimens are available. The American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists has published a stepwise algorithm for pharmacologic treatment of NVP, recommending pyridoxine (vitamin B6) and doxylamine as first-line agents when conservative treatment with dietary and lifestyle changes is unsuccessful.9 In April 2013, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved Diclegis® (Duchesnay USA Inc., Rosemont, PA, USA), a combination of delayed-release doxylamine succinate and pyridoxine hydrochloride, for the treatment of NVP. Diclegis is the only antiemetic with FDA Pregnancy Category A status, indicating that adequate and well-controlled studies have failed to demonstrate a risk to the fetus in the first trimester of pregnancy (and there is no evidence of risk in later trimesters). This review addresses the historical context, safety, efficacy, pharmacology, and practical role of doxylamine and pyridoxine for the management of NVP.

History of Bendectin

Diclegis is a reincarnation of the drug combination previously marketed, and unfairly maligned, in the US under the brand name Bendectin (Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Kansas, MO, USA). Diclegis contains the same active ingredients as Bendectin and has the same indication. Great effort has been put into demonstrating the safety of Diclegis due to previous experience with another drug used for NVP called thalidomide. Thalidomide was never approved or licensed by the FDA for use in the US, but thousands of pregnant women in the US in the 1950s had access to thalidomide through clinical trials and from other countries. The offspring of women who used thalidomide for NVP developed major anomalies, most commonly bilateral limb reductions called phocomelia. Although the application to the FDA for approval of the drug was withdrawn, the teratogenicity of thalidomide had a major influence on the development and use of any medication during early pregnancy thereafter.11

Bendectin was FDA-approved in 1956 for treatment of NVP. The original formulation included doxylamine succinate, pyridoxine hydrochloride, and dicyclomine hydrochloride. After studies showing no benefit of dicyclomine, which is an antispasmodic agent, Bendectin was reformulated in 1976 to contain only doxylamine and pyridoxine. Bendectin became a leading treatment for NVP in the US as well as other countries under different trade names. It was known as Debendox in the UK and Australia, and as Lenotan in Germany, Switzerland, and other countries in Europe, South America, and Africa. In the 1970s, a number of lawsuits were filed alleging that Bendectin, like thalidomide, was responsible for congenital defects. Unlike claims against thalidomide, however, the claims against Bendectin were for multiple defects and biologically implausible. One of the cases that received widespread publicity alleged that Bendectin use during pregnancy caused unilateral fetal limb reduction, which is not biologically plausible because limb defects caused by drug exposure would be bilateral. Despite a lack of scientific evidence, the number of lawsuits grew. In 1983, the manufacturer of Bendectin elected to discontinue production of Bendectin, not because Bendectin was hazardous, but because insurance premiums had become untenable.11

While Bendectin was available in the US from 1958 to 1983, it is estimated that 25%–30% of all pregnant women received this medication. The 1980 National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey indicated that Bendectin accounted for 82% of the antiemetic use for NVP that year. After the discontinuation of Bendectin, hospital admissions for excessive vomiting in pregnancy doubled from 1980 to 1985, the period when Bendectin use declined and ceased in the US. Overall antiemetic use for NVP dropped 90% during that time, due to the absence of Bendectin and failure of any other antiemetic to fill the void. During that period, birth-defect rates remained constant (Figure 1).12

Figure 1 Public health data related to Bendectin therapy.
Notes: NVP hospitalization data were collected by the National Center for Health Statistics. Birth defect data were collected by the Centers for Disease Control. Bendectin sales data were collected by the Food and Drug Administration. Reproduced with permission from Kutcher JS, Engle A, Firth J, Lamm SH. Bendectin and birth defects. II: Ecological analyses. Birth Defects Res A Clin Mol Teratol. 2003;67(2):88–97. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc., A Wiley Company.12
Abbreviation: NVP, nausea and vomiting in pregnancy.

Safety of doxylamine and pyridoxine

Although Bendectin was withdrawn from the US market due to lawsuits that alleged a teratogenic effect, no other agents given in pregnancy have more conclusive safety data with regard to teratogenicity (Table 1).13 Since the withdrawal of Bendectin from the American market, the FDA has twice indicated, in 1983 and in 1999, that the medication had not been withdrawn from sales due to lack of safety or effectiveness. Teratologic studies in rabbits and rats, as well as extensive epidemiologic studies, have produced no evidence that exposure to any of the components of Bendectin in the first trimester of pregnancy causes an increase in malformations, stillbirths, or growth restriction in exposed fetuses compared to controls.14 Many studies have confirmed the fetal safety of this drug combination, including two meta-analyses. The first meta-analysis in 1988 gave an overall summary odds ratio of 1.01 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.66–1.55).15 The second meta-analysis combined data from all the cohort and case-control studies reported through 1993, and estimated the relative risk of any malformation at birth in association with exposure to Bendectin in the first trimester to be 0.95 (95% CI 0.88–1.04).16 Therefore, those studies as a group showed no difference in the risk of birth defects between those infants whose mothers had taken Bendectin during the first trimester of pregnancy and those infants whose mothers had not. The drug combination of doxylamine and pyridoxine has been studied in a total of over 200,000 pregnant women, which is more than any other drug, for any indication, in pregnancy.17

Table 1 Summary of selected cited studies
Abbreviations: OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; RR, relative risk; NVP, nausea and vomiting in pregnancy; PUQE, pregnancy-unique quantification of emesis.

The Canadian generic version of the delayed-release formulation of doxylamine and pyridoxine, Diclectin® (Duchesnay), has remained available as the first-line treatment18 for NVP in Canada without any reports of it causing fetal anomalies in continuing reviews. Bendectin, Diclectin, and Diclegis all contain the same active ingredients in the same dosages, but the current Diclectin and Diclegis formulation reflects modern manufacturing technology for a delayed-release tablet. One observational, prospective study of the delayed-release combination of doxylamine and pyridoxine showed that higher-than-standard doses, when calculated per kilogram of body weight, do not affect either the incidence of maternal adverse effects or pregnancy outcome.19 One prospective cohort study of mother–child pairs was conducted to determine the effects of NVP and its treatment with Diclectin on child neurodevelopment, and found no adverse effect on children’s cognitive abilities upon follow-up at ages 3–7 years.20

Efficacy of doxylamine and pyridoxine

In general, there has been a lack of high-quality evidence to support the effectiveness of any specific intervention in NVP,21 but available data support the efficacy of doxylamine and pyridoxine as an antiemetic for mild-to-moderate NVP (Table 1). A randomized controlled trial of the effectiveness of the delayed-release combination of doxylamine succinate 10 mg and pyridoxine hydrochloride 10 mg (Diclectin) for NVP was crucial for its reintroduction by the FDA into practice in the US. The only previous randomized studies conducted on Bendectin about 40 years ago were submitted to the FDA without publication in peer-reviewed literature. In 2010, a randomized, double-blind, multicenter, placebo-controlled trial in the US enrolled 261 patients in the gestational age range of 7–14 weeks. The study used a two-part pregnancy-unique quantification of emesis (PUQE) score, which is the only validated scoring system that incorporates both the physical (nausea, vomiting, retching) and quality-of-life aspects of NVP. The PUQE scoring system has been widely used and has been validated for use in both English and Spanish. In this study, Diclectin use resulted in a significantly larger improvement in symptoms of NVP compared with placebo over 15 days based on both the clinical PUQE score (scale 3–15) (−4.8±2.7 PUQE score versus −3.9±2.6; P=0.006) and global assessment of well-being (scale 1–10) (2.8±2.8 versus 1.8±2.2; P=0.005).17 At the end of the 15-day trial, 48.9% of the 131 women receiving Diclectin asked to continue compassionate use of their medication, compared with 32.8% of the 125 placebo-control women (P=0.009). Women on the drug required fewer alternative treatments, and also reported missing less time from work.17 A smaller prospective cohort study conducted in Israel between 2008 and 2010 followed 163 women who contacted a free call-in center for queries regarding drug use during pregnancy and lactation. They compared a combination of doxylamine and pyridoxine taken from commercially available over-the-counter preparations in Israel (pyridoxine 50 mg and doxylamine succinate 25 mg) with metoclopramide. They found no difference in reported efficacy (69% versus 72%, P=0.65).22

Two controlled trials have shown efficacy of vitamin B6 (pyridoxine) alone for NVP. The first study was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in the US. Fifty-nine patients with NVP were randomized to either vitamin B6 or placebo at a dose of 25 mg three times a day for 3 days. Half of the patients stopped vomiting, and most patients with severe nausea reported diminution to mild or moderate nausea by the visual analog scale.23 This trial was repeated a few years later in Thailand with a larger sample size. The investigators randomized 342 women to take vitamin B6 10 mg three times a day or placebo for 5 days. They showed a significant decrease in nausea by the visual analog scale.24 Despite demonstrated efficacy, the mechanism for how pyridoxine works as an antiemetic in NVP is unknown. Interestingly, a prospective study of 180 women found no difference between serum indicators of vitamin B6 status and the incidence or degree of morning sickness.25 Two other studies have found that women who were taking a multivitamin at the time of conception were less likely to need medical attention for vomiting.26,27 Although the etiology of NVP has not been linked to deficiency of a specific vitamin, the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends that women with a history of NVP or hyperemesis gravidarum in a prior pregnancy be advised to take a multivitamin at the time of the next conception.9 A recent randomized control trial studied women who had experienced severe NVP and/or hyperemesis gravidarum in a prior pregnancy. One group preemptively started Diclectin with a positive pregnancy test, and the control group started Diclectin only with the first symptoms of NVP. There were 2.5-fold fewer cases of moderate–severe cases of NVP in the preemptive group than in the control group (15.4% versus 39.13%, P=0.05).28

Pharmacology of Diclegis

The two active ingredients, doxylamine and pyridoxine, are unrelated, but appear to have a synergistic effect in the alleviation of NVP. Doxylamine is an antihistamine that blocks H1 receptors. In general, antihistamines directly inhibit the action of histamine at the H1 receptor and indirectly affect the vestibular system, decreasing stimulation of the vomiting center. Muscarinic receptor inhibition may also play a role in antihistamine antiemetic activity.29 Pyridoxine (vitamin B6) is a water-soluble vitamin that is an essential coenzyme for the metabolism of amino acids, lipids, and carbohydrates. How pyridoxine exerts antiemetic effects is unclear.

The recommended starting dose for Diclegis is two tablets taken at bedtime, when NVP tends to be minimal. Both doxylamine and pyridoxine are conveniently delayed for release in the morning, the most common time for NVP. If symptoms are not adequately controlled, the dose can be increased by adding one tablet in the morning. If symptoms are still not adequately controlled, another tablet can be added in the afternoon to a maximum recommended dose of four tablets daily. Due to the delayed-release preparation, the tablets should not be crushed, chewed, or split. Although the maximum recommended dose is four tablets per day, current common practice with Diclectin in Canada allows for adjustment for severity of symptoms and/or maternal body mass index. One study showed that if the patient has a higher body mass index, she may take up to eight to 12 tablets a day without increasing maternal adverse effects, fetal risks, degree of tiredness, or birth defects.19

Dosing of the delayed-release combination of doxylamine and pyridoxine (Diclectin or Diclegis) is timed so that onset of action is most likely to occur in the early morning, when NVP symptoms are commonly at their peak. The half-life of doxylamine in the delayed-release tablet is 11.7 hours, and the half-life of pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (an active metabolite of pyridoxine) is 56 hours.30 However, there is some variability in its onset and duration of action among women. It is estimated that the oral bioavailability of pyridoxine is 100%, so interindividual differences in metabolism, rather than bioavailability, are thought to account for variation in therapeutic response.31 Both doxylamine and pyridoxine are hepatically cleared. A recent study compared the pharmacokinetics of doxylamine and pyridoxine in nonpregnant women of reproductive age and women in their first trimester of pregnancy with a diagnosis of NVP. There were no statistically significant differences in apparent clearance rates for doxylamine or pyridoxine in pregnant and nonpregnant women.30

Adverse effects and warnings

Reported adverse effects of doxylamine and pyridoxine delayed-release tablets include somnolence, headache, dizziness, dry mouth, and hypersensitivity. According to the package insert, doxylamine and pyridoxine delayed-release tablets are contraindicated in women with known hypersensitivity to doxylamine, other ethanolamine-derivative antihistamines, or pyridoxine. It is also contraindicated in combination with monoamine oxidase inhibitors, which intensify and prolong the adverse central nervous system effects. Monoamine oxidase inhibitors may also prolong and intensify the anticholinergic (drying effects) of such antihistamines as doxylamine. This medication may cause somnolence due to the anticholinergic properties of doxylamine. Use of this medication is not recommended if a woman is concurrently using central nervous system depressants, such as alcohol or sedating medications, including other antihistamines (that may be in cough and cold medications), opiates, or sleep aids. This medication has anticholinergic properties, and should be used with caution in women who have 1) asthma, 2) increased intraocular pressure, 3) narrow-angle glaucoma, 4) stenosing peptic ulcer, 5) pyloroduodenal obstruction, or 6) bladder-neck obstruction.

Comparison to other antiemetics

The patient’s perception of the severity of her symptoms plays a critical role in whether, when, and how to treat NVP. The individual components doxylamine and pyridoxine are readily available over the counter in the US, and had been used “off-label” for the treatment of NVP long before the introduction of Diclegis. Currently, the generic forms of pyridoxine and doxylamine cost much less than the brand name Diclegis (Table 2). Potential disadvantages of using generic, over-the-counter preparations include the inconvenience of 1) splitting generic tablets into smaller doses, 2) needing multiple tablets, 3) identifying the correct over-the-counter drug to use, and 4) lack of delayed-release effects. For example, Unisom® (Chattem, Inc., Chattanooga, TN, USA) has four sleep-aid medications with similar names (SleepTabs®, SleepGels®, SleepMelts™, and PM Pain SleepCaps™). Only SleepTabs are comprised of doxylamine; the other three have diphenhydramine hydrochloride as the active ingredient. In the US, Diclegis is fully covered by Medicaid insurance due to its FDA Pregnancy Category A status.

Table 2 Costs of antiemetics
Notes: Reglan® (Ani Pharmaceuticals, Baudette, MN, USA); Phenergan® (Baxter Healthcare Corp., Deerfield, IL, USA); Zofran® (GlaxoSmithKline Pharmaceuticals, Philadelphia, PA, USA).

If pyridoxine and doxylamine are insufficient to treat a patient’s symptoms, then stepwise escalation of pharmacologic therapies is recommended, assuming that other causes of nausea and vomiting have been excluded. For hyperemesis gravidarum or dehydration, intravenous fluid replacement with thiamine is necessary, along with other antiemetics (Figure 2).

Figure 2 ACOG (American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists) algorithm for pharmacologic treatment of NVP (Nausea and vomiting in pregnancy).
Notes: *This algorithm assumes other causes of nausea and vomiting have been ruled out. At any step, consider parenteral nutrition if dehydration or persistent weight loss is noted. Alternative therapies may be added at any time during the sequence depending on patient acceptance and clinician familiarity; consider P6 acupressure with wrist bands or acustimulation or ginger capsules, 250 mg 4 times daily; in the United States, doxylamine is available as the active ingredient in some over-the-counter sleep aids; one half of a scored 25 mg tablet can be used to provide a 12.5 mg dose of doxylamine; thiamine, intravenously, 100 mg daily for 2–3 days (followed by intravenous multivitamins), is recommended for every woman who requires intravenous hydration and has vomited for more than 3 weeks; $corticosteroids appear to increase risk for oral clefts in the first 10 weeks of gestation; safety, particularly in the first trimester of pregnancy, not yet determined; less effect on nausea.

Antihistamines

Other antihistamines, such as diphenhydramine, dimenhydrinate, meclizine, or hydroxyzine, can be substituted for doxylamine if treatment with pyridoxine and doxylamine is inadequate to control symptoms. Substitution of doxylamine, rather than addition to, is preferred to minimize somnolence. None of these agents have been shown to be teratogenic.32

Phenothiazines

Promethazine or prochlorperazine is often prescribed if antihistamines fail. Studies show that promethazine is as effective as metoclopramide33 and ondansetron34 in the treatment of hyperemesis gravidarum, but is generally more sedating than the other two medications, and thus may be less desirable. Multiple observational studies of patients exposed to various phenothiazines have failed to demonstrate an increased risk for major malformations.35 Promethazine has a “black-box warning” for severe tissue injuries with intravenous or subcutaneous administration. Oral, rectal, or intramuscular administration of promethazine is thus preferred.

Dopamine antagonists

Metoclopramide is also often prescribed if antihistamines fail. Metoclopramide is a prokinetic agent that has long been used in Europe and Israel for NVP. One randomized controlled trial comparing metoclopramide and promethazine for the treatment of hyperemesis gravidarum showed no difference in efficacy, but metoclopramide was less sedating.33 There have been no safety concerns specific to pregnancy.32 The largest study to date was published in 2013, with 28,486 first-trimester exposures and no increased risk of major congenital malformations.36 Metoclopramide has been associated in rare cases with tardive dyskinesia, and it has a black-box warning for this reason. The risk of development of this maternal complication increases with duration of treatment and total cumulative dose, so its use should not extend beyond 12 weeks.

5-hydroxytryptamine 3-receptor antagonists

Ondansetron is FDA-approved for use in treating chemotherapy-induced and postoperative nausea and vomiting, but there is increasing information about its use in pregnancy. One randomized trial comparing ondansetron and promethazine in pregnancy showed similar efficacy between the two, but ondansetron was less sedating.34 In 2011, data from the National Birth Defects Prevention Study (a multisite, population-based, case-control study in the US) suggested an increased risk for cleft palate (adjusted odds ratio 2.37, 95% CI 1.18–4.76) among women treated with ondansetron for NVP in the first trimester.10 The largest study to date, published in February 2013, utilized data from Danish pregnancy, birth, and prescription registries. There were 1,233 first-trimester exposures between 2004 and 2011, and there was no increased risk of major congenital malformations in offspring of exposed compared to unexposed women (2.9% versus 2.9%, prevalence odds ratio 1.12, 95% CI 0.69–1.82).37 However, another group of investigators presented data in August 2013 based on the same Danish registries, but with 1,248 women who filled a prescription for ondansetron during the first trimester between 1997 and 2010. Their data indicate a mildly increased risk for congenital malformations (3.5% and 4.7%, adjusted odds ratio 1.3), mostly due to a twofold increase in congenital heart defects associated with ondansetron use during the first trimester of pregnancy.38,39

Glucocorticoids

Methylprednisolone is an option in refractory cases or hyperemesis gravidarum after 10 weeks’ gestation. A meta-analysis of four studies showed a small increase in risk of cleft lip if used before 10 weeks’ gestation, and higher doses were associated with greater risks.40 To limit serious maternal side effects, therapy should be limited to 6 weeks.

Alternative therapies

Alternative therapies may be added at any time during the management of NVP, depending on patient acceptance and clinician familiarity. As an alternative therapy, ginger shows the strongest data. Several controlled trials have compared ginger with placebo, and found a statistically significant decrease in NVP in women who took ginger.29,41 Two other studies compared ginger with pyridoxine, and found both interventions to be equivalent in the treatment of NVP.29,31

Conclusion

The reintroduction of doxylamine and pyridoxine as a delayed-release combination pill with US FDA Category A status emphasizes its favorable safety profile and bolsters the recommendation that it be used as first-line treatment in the pharmacologic management of NVP. Given the history of thalidomide and Bendectin, it is important to address concerns and alleviate fears about the safety of medications taken in early pregnancy so that quality of life may not be unnecessarily compromised. Doxylamine and pyridoxine have become the most studied drugs for NVP, and their use may alleviate many women’s symptoms without the need for escalation to other medications that, while also effective, do not have as robust a safety profile.

Disclosure

Dr Niebyl has received honoraria for lecturing from Medavera, MedEdNow, and Science First, all medical education companies who have received educational grants from Duchesnay, maker of Diclegis. The authors report no other conflicts of interest in this work.


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