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WARNING: DO NOT DISCONTINUE ANY ANTIDEPRESSANT OR OTHER
PSYCHIATRIC DRUG ABRUPTLY OR TAPER TOO QUICKLY. DOING SO PUTS YOU AT GREATER
RISK OF COMMITTING SUICIDE AND HOMICIDE DURING A SLEEPWALK STATE, OR OF BECOMING
PSYCHOTIC, AMONG OTHER RISKS. CLICK HERE TO READ HOW TO TAPER SAFELY.

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Let's Help Rebecca Come Back Home, Mate... Click Here!

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DHB criticised over newborn's care
5:00AM Thursday September 27,
2007
The Health and Disability Commissioner has
criticised the West Coast District Health Board
after lack of care by three midwives left a newborn
boy with permanent neurological problems.
Commissioner Ron Paterson also criticised the DHB
over the subsequent delays and handling of the
complaint into the case.
When the boy, known as Baby A, was born in 2004,
he developed hypoglycaemia, or low blood sugar,
after he stopped feeding normally in the two days
after his birth.
Mr Paterson said the baby, at the lower end of
the normal weight range, was vulnerable to
hypoglycaemia as his mother, Ms A, was a heavy
smoker and taking antidepressants during her
pregnancy.
An independent adviser to Mr. Paterson, midwife
Nimisha Waller, said that as Baby A's weight was
still inside the normal range he was not considered
to be at risk of hypoglycaemia and did not get
regular blood glucose monitoring.
She said all the midwives failed in developing a
plan of care on a daily basis and did not recognise
a change in Baby A's feeding pattern which resulted
in the condition.
Mr. Paterson said the combination of risk factors
meant the midwives should have immediately monitored
blood sugar levels and monitored feeding.
The three midwives have since reviewed their
practice and written apologies to Ms A for the lack
of care. The DHB has also written an apology to Ms A
and is to audit its neonatal policies in regard to
low-weight or at-risk babies.
NZPA
http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/164/10/1457
Am J Psychiatry
164:1457-1459, October 2007
doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2007.07071149
© 2007
American Psychiatric Association
Editorial
The Treatment of Women Suffering From
Depression Who Are Either Pregnant or Breastfeeding
Kimberly A.
Yonkers, M.D.
In medicine, there are often situations that
require patients and their providers to
make difficult management decisions. We
turn to systematic evidence to guide our approach
and counsel our patients, but many times
the information is limited or inadequate.
The treatment of women with depression who are
either pregnant or breastfeeding presents
a number of issues for which we have
insufficient data. These include questions such as,
What is the relative likelihood of
becoming depressed and requiring
treatment during pregnancy or the several months
after delivery? What are the short- and
long-term consequences for children
exposed to maternal psychiatric illness or to
pharmacological treatment? What are the
short- and long-term consequences for a
neonate exposed to an antidepressant as a result of
breastfeeding? The absence of sufficient
data is not the result of a lack of
interest among researchers but derives largely from
the ethical and practical issues that
make research in this area difficult. For
example, it is neither ethical nor practical to
randomly assign depressed, pregnant women
to antidepressant agents versus placebo
in order to evaluate their clinical outcomes and the
sequelae for their offspring. Rather, we must
turn to observational, cohort studies and
reports that rely on administrative databases.
An issue with the latter source of information
is that it can be difficult to
disentangle confounding effects from main effects.
In the case of exploring maternal and fetal
outcomes among women who are depressed,
pregnant, and undergoing pharmacological
treatment, it is not always possible to determine
the role of the underlying illness
(depressive symptoms or the biology of
depression), unhealthy behaviors (e.g., hazardous
substance use), and antidepressant
exposure. Bad news seems to make a better
story than good news, and thus we tend to hear more
about the problems associated with
antidepressants than about the reassuring
news that a compound is not a major teratogen or
is not likely to compromise behavioral
outcomes over the long term.
The sensationalism that often accompanies
stories about negative outcomes
reinforces the importance of continuing to conduct
rigorous new research and publish thoughtful
syntheses of the literature. The August
(1) and
September
(2) issues of the Journal
contained reviews and treatment recommendations
regarding clinical management of either
pregnant or lactating women with depressive
disorders. In the current issue, Dietz and
colleagues provide information regarding
how frequently a woman is likely to be
diagnosed and treated for a depressive disorder
before, during, and after pregnancy.
The article by Freeman from the August issue
(1)
reviews several studies that explored
whether specific fetal anomalies are associated
with in utero exposure to selective serotonin
reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), either as a
class or as individual agents. Generally,
there has been less support for a "class effect" for
the SSRIs, while several administrative
databases
(3, 4)
and teratogen information services
(5)
suggest an association between paroxetine
and cardiac malformations. However, the weight of
evidence is a moving target since two
large case-cohort studies published in
June (6,
7) did
not replicate this finding but, instead,
found additional possible associations between other
anomalies and paroxetine as well as other
antidepressants. The mixed findings are
likely a result of attempts to identify associations
between relatively infrequent
antidepressant exposure and rare defects,
which require large databases that may have residual
confounders. While there may be risks
when antidepressants are used in pregnancy,
these effects are not large effects, as would
be expected for a major teratogen
(8).
When one turns from the effects of in utero
exposure to the consequences of neonatal
exposure through breast milk, there is
far less information and the most data are derived
from case reports and small cohort
studies, as outlined by Payne in the
September issue of the Journal
(2).
The take-home messages are that
breastfeeding has many benefits, the amount of
medication in breast milk varies
according to when the drug is taken and
what part of breast milk is assayed, but usually
maternal use does not lead to substantial
levels in the neonate. However, it is
best that neonates be monitored for difficulty
feeding, weight gain, sleep or state
changes, etc., if the mother is
undergoing antidepressant treatment while
breastfeeding.
While it is important to have guidelines for
managing depression in pregnancy
(9), we
also need to know if pregnancy decreases
and the postpartum period increases the risk of
depression. It is commonly thought that
depression increases during the
postpartum time, but many systematic studies do not
support this
(10).
However, most cohort studies have had rather modest
sample sizes, and there is other research
showing that treatment visits and
psychiatric hospitalizations increase after,
compared to before, delivery
(11).
This finding was replicated by Dietz et
al. in the current issue of the Journal. The
authors used the database of a large
health maintenance organization and
assessed rates of any depressive disorder 39 weeks
before, during, and after pregnancy. The
rates for recorded depressive diagnoses
were 8.7%, 6.9%, and 10.4%, respectively, for those
time intervals. Diagnoses were made
significantly more frequently during the
39 weeks postdelivery than during pregnancy,
although over 50% of the women who were
diagnosed with a depressive disorder after
delivery were also diagnosed with a depressive
disorder before delivery. Whether the
higher rate of depressive disorders postpartum
is a result of patients’ willingness to
disclose depressive symptoms after
delivery, clinicians’ increased vigilance
in diagnosing depressive disorders postnatally, or a
true difference in the incidence of
depression is not clear.
The challenge for answering a number of
questions regarding the incidence of
pregnancy-related mood disorders and the risks
and benefits associated with their treatment
is a classic trade-off between power and
precision. Given the ethical and practical
constraints, large cohorts are needed to
address some of these questions.
Administrative databases provide the largest sample
sizes and the most power. But the cost of this
is a lack of precision regarding
information about possible confounders,
such as health habits and illness characteristics.
Such is the issue in the study by Dietz
et al. and the previous study by Munk-Olsen
et al. (11).
But we must use the information that we
have and hope for increased opportunities to enhance
that database with future, rigorously
controlled studies.
Footnotes
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr.
Yonkers, Yale University School of
Medicine, Suite 301, 142 Temple St., New
Haven, CT 06540;
kimberly.yonkers@yale.edu (e-mail). Editorial
accepted for publication July 2007 (doi:
10.1176/appi.ajp.2007.07071149).
Dr. Yonkers has received research support from
the National Institute of Mental Health,
the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the
National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development, the National Alliance for
Research on Schizophrenia and Depression,
Eli Lilly and Company, and Wyeth Pharmaceuticals;
she has received consulting fees from
Berlex Laboratories and Wyeth Pharmaceuticals
in the last 3 years. Dr. Freedman has reviewed
this editorial and found no evidence of
influence from these relationships.
References
TOP
References
- Freeman MP: Antenatal depression: navigating
the treatment dilemmas. Am J Psychiatry 2007;
164:1162–1165
[
Free
Full Text]
Payne JL: Antidepressant use in the
postpartum period: practical considerations. Am
J Psychiatry 2007; 164:1329–1332
[Free
Full Text]
Källén BAJ, Olausson PO: Maternal use of
selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors in
early pregnancy and infant congenital
malformations. Birth Defects Res A Clin Mol
Teratol 2007; 79:301–308
[CrossRef]
[Medline]
GlaxoSmithKline: Updated Preliminary Report
on Bupropion and Other Antidepressants,
Including Paroxetine, in Pregnancy and the
Occurrence of Cardiovascular and Major
Congenital Malformation.
http://us.gsk.com/docs-pdf/media-news/ingenix_study.pdf
Diav-Citrin O, Shechtman S, Weinbaum D,
Arnon J, Gianantonio ED, Clementi M, Ornoy A:
Paroxetine and fluoxetine in pregnancy: a
multicenter, prospective, controlled study
(abstract). Reprod Toxicol 2005; 20:459
[CrossRef]
Louik C, Lin AE, Werler MM, Hernández-Díaz
S, Mitchell AA: First-trimester use of selective
serotonin-reuptake inhibitors and the risk of
birth defects. N Engl J Med 2007; 356:2675–2683
[Abstract/Free
Full Text]
Alwan S, Reefhuis J, Rasmussen SA, Olney RS,
Friedman JM; National Birth Defects Prevention
Study: Use of selective serotonin-reuptake
inhibitors in pregnancy and the risk of birth
defects. N Engl J Med 2007; 356:2684–2692
[Abstract/Free
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Greene MF: Teratogenicity of SSRIsserious
concern or much ado about little? (editorial). N
Engl J Med 2007; 356:2732–2733
[Free
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Wisner K, Gelenberg A, Leonard H, Zarin D,
Frank E: Pharmacologic treatment of depression
during pregnancy. JAMA 1999; 282:1264–1269
[Abstract/Free
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Hobfoll SE, Ritter C, Lavin J, Hulsizer MR,
Cameron RP: Depression prevalence and incidence
among inner-city pregnant and postpartum women.
J Consult Clin Psychol 1995; 63:445–453
[CrossRef]
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Munk-Olsen T, Laursen TM, Pedersen CB, Mors
O, Mortensen PB: New parents and mental
disorders: a population-based register study.
JAMA 2006; 296:2582–2589
[Abstract/Free
Full Text]
Related
Article:
In This Issue Am J Psychiatry 2007 164: 34.
[Full Text]
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Maternal Depression Before,
During, and After Pregnancy
More than half of women in an
HMO who developed postpartum
depression had also been
depressed during pregnancy or in the
9 months before
pregnancy. A prospective study of
4,400 women by Dietz et
al. (p.
1515) also demonstrated that
more than half of those
who were depressed before pregnancy
were also identified with
depression while pregnant. The rates
of depression were 9%,
7%, and 10% before, during, and
after pregnancy. Most depressed
women received treatment, but
during pregnancy only two-thirds
took antidepressants and the
proportion who received psychosocial
treatment did not rise. White
race, being unmarried, already
having three or more children,
receiving Medicaid, and smoking
were associated with
depression, but none was a strong
risk factor. Dr. Kimberly
Yonkers reviews research on maternal
depression and its
treatment in an editorial on p.
1457. |
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