Placental Drug Transfer - Baby's First Dose
Fetal drug exposure begins here.
- Mechanisms:
- Passive Diffusion: Most common. Favors lipid-soluble, unionized.
- Facilitated Diffusion: Carrier-mediated (glucose).
- Active Transport: Needs energy (amino acids, iron).
- Pinocytosis: For large molecules (IgG).
- Key Factors Influencing Transfer:
- Maternal: Drug dose, uterine blood flow.
- Placental: Surface area, thickness (↓ with gestation ↑ transfer), placental age, metabolism (P-gp efflux ↓ transfer).
- Fetal: pH (ion trapping), blood flow, protein binding.
- Drug Properties Favoring Transfer:
- High lipid solubility
- Low Molecular Weight (MW): <500 Da (easy), >1000 Da (poorly)
- E.g., Warfarin (crosses) vs. Heparin (high MW, doesn't cross)
- Unionized state
- Low maternal protein binding (↑ free drug)
📌 Mnemonic: 'PLacenta TRANSFER' (Properties, Lipid solubility, Area, Concentration, Thickness, etc.)

⭐ Most drugs cross the placenta primarily by passive diffusion, driven by concentration gradients and favored by high lipid solubility and low molecular weight.
Teratogenicity & Fetal Effects - Handle With Care
- Teratogen: Agent causing fetal abnormalities.
- Critical Periods of Exposure:
- 'All-or-None' Period: First 2 weeks post-conception. Exposure: embryo death or normal development.
- Organogenesis (Embryonic Period): Week 3-8 post-conception. Max susceptibility to major structural anomalies.
⭐ The period of maximum susceptibility to major morphological abnormalities (teratogenesis) is the embryonic period, from week 3 to week 8 post-conception.
- Fetal Period: Week 9 to term. Growth retardation, CNS/functional defects.

- Drug Risk Classification:
- Old FDA Categories (A,B,C,D,X) replaced by PLLR (Pregnancy, Lactation, Females/Males of Reproductive Potential) for detailed risk.
- Key Teratogens & Effects:
Teratogen Defect(s) Thalidomide Phocomelia (limb defects) Valproate/Carbamazepine Neural tube defects (NTDs) ACE inhibitors/ARBs Renal dysgenesis, oligohydramnios (late) Warfarin Nasal hypoplasia, chondrodysplasia Isotretinoin (Vit. A) CNS, craniofacial, CV defects Phenytoin Fetal hydantoin syndrome Lithium Ebstein's anomaly (cardiac) - 📌 Mnemonic: Warfarin, ACEi, Retinoids (Isotretinoin), Antiepileptics (Valproate, Phenytoin), Thalidomide, Lithium. (Acronym: WARATL)
- Fetal Adverse Drug Reactions (FADRs):
- Distinct from teratogenicity; occur later, often functional.
- Examples:
- NSAIDs (3rd trim): Premature ductus arteriosus closure.
- Opioids (late): Neonatal withdrawal.
- Aminoglycosides: Ototoxicity (CN VIII).
- Tetracyclines: Teeth/bone defects.
Drugs in Lactation - Milk Bar Pharmacy
- Mechanisms: Passive diffusion (lipid-soluble, low MW), active transport (cimetidine, iodine).
- Factors Affecting Excretion:
- Maternal: Dose, plasma conc., metabolism, timing.
- Drug: ↑Lipid solubility, ↓MW (<200 Da), ↓Protein binding, pKa (weak bases ↑conc.), ↑half-life.
- Milk/Plasma (M/P) Ratio: [Milk]/[Plasma]; >1 → drug concentrates in milk.
- Relative Infant Dose (RID %): (Infant dose / Maternal dose) wt. adj.; <10% generally safe.
- Ion Trapping: Weak bases (e.g., erythromycin) trapped in acidic milk (pH ~7.0-7.2) vs plasma (pH ~7.4). $pH - pKa = log([B]/[BH+])$.
⭐ Weakly basic drugs tend to be trapped and concentrated in the relatively acidic environment of breast milk due to ion trapping, leading to higher M/P ratios.
- Minimize Exposure:
- Drugs: ↓t½, ↑protein binding, ↓lipid solubility, ↑MW, ↓M/P, ↓RID.
- Timing: Take drug post-feed or before infant's longest sleep.
- Contraindicated/Caution: Amiodarone, anticancer, lithium, radioisotopes, illicit drugs, ergotamine. (LactMed).
- 📌 BREAST Mnemonic: Bases trapped, RID <10%, Evaluate infant, Amount low, Short half-life, Timing of dose.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Lipid-soluble, low MW, and non-ionized drugs readily cross the placenta.
- The placental barrier is not absolute; most drugs cross to the fetus.
- Teratogens (e.g., thalidomide, valproate) cause defects during organogenesis.
- FDA pregnancy categories (A, B, C, D, X) help assess fetal risk.
- Most drugs enter breast milk; high lipid solubility & low protein binding favor this.
- Weakly basic drugs undergo ion trapping in acidic breast milk.
- Avoid tetracyclines, warfarin in pregnancy; lithium, amiodarone during lactation.
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