Psychiatric Drugs, Pregnancy and Lactation: In Utero Antidepressant Exposure
December 1, 2003 from
ObGynNews
By Lee S. Cohen, M.D.
Data on the risk of fetal malformations and adverse peripartum events
associated with in utero
exposure to antidepressants are reassuring, especially
with regard to the
tricyclics and some of the
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). Prospective data on the longer-term neurobehavioral sequelae
associated with such exposure are much more limited, however.
In the last several years, some studies have been published in which
researchers tracked neurobehavioral
function over a period of months to years in children
exposed to SSRIs in utero.
While it's exciting to have some new information in this previously uncharted
area, some of the data are inconsistent and have led to confusion among patients
and health care providers.
A recent study conducted by investigators at the Motherisk Program at the
University of Toronto prospectively evaluated the neurodevelopment of 86
children aged 15-71 months who were exposed to fluoxetine (Prozac) or a tricyclic antidepressant throughout pregnancy.
The study showed no differences in well-established neurobehavioral indices
between these children and 36 unexposed children of non-depressed women (Am. J.
Psychiatry 159[11]:1889-95, 2002). This study was a follow-up to an earlier
study that looked at neurobehavioral function in children exposed to these
medications only during the first trimester, and the results were consistent.
Of note, the duration of maternal depression was a significant negative
predictor of cognitive function in children; for example, the number of
depressive episodes after delivery was negatively associated with language
scores. These data support the now well-established finding that an uncontrolled
postpartum mood disorder can have adverse effects on the baby's neurocognitive
development.
In a study published in April, Stanford University investigators compared the
perinatal and neurobehavioral outcomes of 31 children exposed in utero to
fluoxetine, sertraline (Zoloft), fluvoxamine (Luvox), or paroxetine (Paxil),
with those of 13 children whose mothers had a major depressive disorder and
received psychotherapy but did not take medication during their pregnancies.
When evaluated between ages 6 months and 40 months, the SSRI-exposed children
had significantly lower scores on psychomotor indices and on neurobehavioral
function (J. Pediatr. 142[4]:402-08, 2003).
On the surface, the results of these two studies are somewhat confusing:
Among the possible explanations for the different findings are methodologic
limitations of the Stanford study. The Motherisk study was a controlled study in
which maternal mood during pregnancy and the postpartum period was assessed
prospectively. But the mood of women in the Stanford study was not prospectively
assessed; a significant number had already given birth when they were asked to
recall what their mood was during pregnancy. As a result, the impact of
antidepressant therapy on their mood is unknown. This is a major confounding
factor because of the considerable data indicating that maternal mood disorders
can adversely affect neurobehavioral function in children.
The results of the Stanford study are interesting, but given these
methodologic limitations, it is particularly difficult to draw any conclusions
from it or to use the findings to inform clinical care. There certainly is
nothing in these findings to suggest that women should avoid taking
antidepressants during pregnancy.
The Stanford authors, who acknowledged the difficulty in controlling for
certain confounding variables and concluded that it should be viewed as a pilot
study, should still be commended for their efforts to perform prospective
neurobehavioral assessments and address the potential for behavioral
teratogenicity--information that is profoundly lacking in the literature.
Multiple studies have shown the importance of keeping women euthymic during
pregnancy, in light of the adverse effects of maternal depression on perinatal
outcome and the extent to which maternal depression in pregnancy predicts
postpartum depression.
In future studies, it will be important to include prospective assessments of
both maternal mood and drug exposure, so the two variables can be teased apart
in terms of their relative contribution to both perinatal outcome and long-term
neurobehavioral outcome.
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: Bipolar Disorder Medications During Pregnancy and Nursing
. drugs during pregnancy index
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