|
Antidepressants
during pregnancy may affect baby
NEW
YORK - Babies born
to women who took the newer type of antidepressants called
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors or SSRIs during
pregnancy appear to be at increased risk of having a low birth
weight and to develop respiratory distress, Canadian
researchers report.
Lead
investigator Dr. Tim F. Oberlander told Reuters Health that
“our study was undertaken to distinguish the effects of
maternal mental illness—pregnancy-related depression—from
its treatment—SSRIs—on neonatal outcomes.”
Oberlander
and colleagues at the University of British Columbia,
Vancouver examined population health data for almost 120,000
live births between 1998 and 2001. Fourteen percent of mothers
were diagnosed with depression. The researchers compared the
outcomes of babies born to 1451 depressed mothers treated with
SSRIs during pregnancy and of those born to 14,234 depressed
mothers who were not treated with SSRIs.
There
was a significantly greater incidence of respiratory distress
(13.9% vs. 7.8%) and longer hospital stays for infants born to
depressed mothers on SSRIs than those born to untreated
depressed mothers, the team reports in the Archives of General
Psychiatry.
Birth
weight and gestational age were also significantly less in
SSRI-exposed infants and a significantly greater proportion
was born before 37 weeks.
“These
findings are contrary to an expectation that treating
depressed mothers with SSRIs during pregnancy would be
associated with lessening of the adverse neonatal consequences
associated with maternal depression,” Oberlander said.
Summing
up, he noted that, “while our study may add another
cautionary note to the use of SSRI medications during
pregnancy, the use of antidepressants must be weighed against
the risks of untreated or undertreated disease ... and thus
the decision should be made by an informed patient with her
physician on a case-by-case basis.”
Source:Archives
of General Psychiatry, August 2006.
Reuters
|