Abstract
Objective
In the absence of safety data in humans, the use of cannabidiol (CBD) is not recommended during pregnancy. Yet >50% of pregnancies in women with epilepsy are unintended, making fetal exposure to CBD possible. As a small-molecule, highly lipid-soluble drug, CBD is likely to distribute into the placenta and cross it. To estimate the placental distribution profile of CBD and its potential short-term placental effects, we conducted an ex vivo perfusion study in human placentas.
Methods
Placentas were obtained from healthy women undergoing cesarean deliveries. Selected cotyledons were cannulated and perfused for 180 min with a CBD-containing medium (250 ng/mL, 0.796 μmol/L; representative of a low therapeutic concentration; n=8). CBD concentrations were determined at 180 min in the medium and placental tissues using LC-MS/MS analysis. A customized gene panel array was used to analyze the expression of selected genes in the perfused placental cotyledons as well as in placentas perfused with 1000 ng/mL CBD (3.18 μmol/L; high therapeutic concentration; n=8) and in those exposed to the vehicle.
Results
CBD sequestered in the placental tissue, exhibiting significant variability across samples (median 5,342 ng/g tissue; range 1,066-9,351 ng/g tissue). CBD concentrations in the fetal compartment were one-fifth of those measured in the maternal compartment (median 59 ng/mL; range 48-72 ng/mL, vs. 280 ng/mL, range 159-388 ng/mL, respectively; p<0.01). Placental gene expression was not significantly altered by CBD.
Significance
The placenta acts as a depot compartment for CBD, slowing-down its distribution to the fetus. This phenomenon might yield flatter but prolonged fetal CBD levels in vivo. The attenuated transplacental CBD transfer does not imply that its use by pregnant women is safe for the fetus. Only pregnancy registries and neurocognitive assessments would establish the risk of being antenatally exposed to CBD.
OCT