Psychiatric Drugs, Pregnancy and Lactation: Recent Antidepressant Label Changes
September 15, 2004 from
ObGynNews
By Lee S. Cohen, M.D.
Physicians and patients may be alarmed by recent changes to the product
labels of the
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and the selective norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor venlafaxine with respect to their
use during
pregnancy.
The labels now describe clinical findings in newborns exposed to these drugs
late in the third trimester, including respiratory distress, jitteriness,
irritability, hypoglycemia, feeding difficulties, cyanosis, hypotonia,
hypertonia, hyperreflexia, and constant crying. Complications requiring
"prolonged hospitalization, respiratory support and tube feeding" are also
mentioned.
Prompting these changes were postmarketing adverse event reports made to the
Food and Drug Administration over several years, suggesting a constellation of
symptoms associated with third trimester exposure. Because these spontaneous
reports were uncontrolled, it is impossible to know with certainty whether they
are secondary to the medicine. Some of the symptoms-such as jitteriness,
irritability, and feeding difficulties-are consistent with anecdotal reports and
case series in the literature, which support at least transient jitteriness and
irritability associated with maternal use of these antidepressants, particularly
late in the third trimester.
But more serious problems such as prolonged hospitalization and the need for
respiratory support are not well supported by any objective data in the medical
literature. Listing these in the label may do little but alarm patients and
physicians.
One theoretical rationale for mandating the label change derives from the
assumption that these symptoms are consistent with
discontinuation symptoms now
well described in older patients who abruptly stop treatment with these
compounds, particularly those that are shorter-acting. While the description of
these symptoms as a "neonatal discontinuation syndrome" is an interesting
clinical hypothesis, it is untested and not supported by data.
The label also now advises physicians to "carefully consider the potential
risks and benefits of treatment" in patients and suggests that clinicians should
consider tapering or discontinuing the medicine late in the third trimester
before labor and delivery. One has to wonder about the wisdom of suggesting a
taper or discontinuation of an antidepressant during this critical time,
considering that the risk for relapse among women who discontinue
antidepressants during pregnancy is high and that depression during pregnancy is
one of the strongest predictors of postpartum depression.
There are no data to suggest that tapering the drug near term attenuates the
risk for toxicity in the newborn. In our earlier work, we actually suggested the
peripartum taper of antidepressants; the approach was intuitive as it avoided
even the potential risk for neonatal toxicity. However, we then observed high
relapse rates among women around labor and delivery, prompting us to shift our
recommendation to continue antidepressant therapy across the peripartum period.
The labeling changes will likely create alarm about a potential clinical
syndrome that has an extremely low incidence and modest clinical significance.
Nonetheless, the label change has the potential to affect scores of women for
whom depression remains a significant medical problem.
These changes may increase the threshold for using antidepressants during
pregnancy not only during the peripartum period but also during other stages of
pregnancy-despite data suggesting that depression in pregnancy has an
independent adverse effect on fetal well-being and is the strongest predictor of
postpartum depression. The text of the label change lacks this context and puts
the clinician in the situation of prescribing counter to the new language if the
decision is made to treat during at least the third trimester of pregnancy. The
label change is an example of blanket, non-evidence-based recommendations that
not only fail to thoughtfully inform clinical care, but also may do more harm
than good.
Clinicians confused by these changes should weigh the risks and benefits of
antidepressant use near delivery. No psychotropic drug is approved for use in
pregnancy, so decisions about using these medicines are made on a case-by-case
basis. For women who have experienced depression during pregnancy, particularly
those who have had residual symptoms of depression,
discontinuing antidepressant
therapy may lead to significant worsening or relapse of depression. These issues
should be discussed with patients in the context of the patient's individual
clinical situation. Only in that context can truly thoughtful treatment
decisions be made pending better controlled data.
Dr. Lee Cohen is a psychiatrist and director of the
perinatal psychiatry program at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. He is a
consultant for and has received research support from manufacturers of several
SSRIs. He is also a consultant to Astra Zeneca, Lilly and Jannsen -
manufacturers of atypical antipsychotics.
continue: Prozac During Pregnancy and Nursing
. drugs during pregnancy index
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