Recurrence risk of congenital malformations in infants exposed to antiepileptic drugs in utero. 2013

Ellen Campbell, and Emma Devenney, and Jim Morrow, and Aline Russell, and William Henry Smithson, and Linda Parsons, and Iain Robertson, and Beth Irwin, and Patrick J Morrison, and Stephen Hunt, and John Craig
Neurology Department, Belfast Health and Social Care Trust, Royal Victoria Hospital, Belfast, United Kingdom.

OBJECTIVE Use of antiepileptic drugs in pregnancy is associated with congenital malformations and developmental delay. Previous studies have suggested that women who have had one child with a congenital malformation are at increased risk of having other children with malformations. We sought to confirm the magnitude of risk in a large cohort drawn from the United Kingdom Epilepsy and Pregnancy Register. METHODS The United Kingdom Epilepsy and Pregnancy Register is a prospective, observational registration and follow-up study set up to determine the relative safety of antiepileptic drugs in pregnancy. We have extracted data for those women who prospectively registered more than one pregnancy and calculated the recurrence risks for fetal malformations. RESULTS Outcome data were available for 1,534 pregnancies born to 719 mothers. For women whose first child had a congenital malformation there was a 16.8% risk of having another child with a congenital malformation, compared with 9.8% for women whose first child did not have a malformation (relative risk 1.73, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.01-2.96). The risk for recurrence was 50% for women who had had two previous children with a congenital malformation. There was a trend toward a higher risk for recurrent malformations in pregnancies exposed to valproate (21.9%, relative risk 1.47, 95% CI 0.68-3.20) and topiramate (50%, relative risk 4.50, 95% CI 0.97-20.82), but not for other drugs such as carbamazepine and lamotrigine. Recurrence risks were also higher for pregnancies exposed to polytherapy regimens and for those where the dose of antiepileptic drug treatment had been increased after the first pregnancy. CONCLUSIONS Women who have had a child with a malformation are at increased risk of having other children with malformations. This is in keeping with previous reports that have suggested that genetic influences may be one of the factors determining the teratogenic risk of antiepileptic drugs.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008297 Male Males
D010298 Parity The number of offspring a female has borne. It is contrasted with GRAVIDITY, which refers to the number of pregnancies, regardless of outcome. Multiparity,Nulliparity,Primiparity,Parity Progression Ratio,Parity Progression Ratios,Ratio, Parity Progression,Ratios, Parity Progression
D011247 Pregnancy The status during which female mammals carry their developing young (EMBRYOS or FETUSES) in utero before birth, beginning from FERTILIZATION to BIRTH. Gestation,Pregnancies
D011248 Pregnancy Complications Conditions or pathological processes associated with pregnancy. They can occur during or after pregnancy, and range from minor discomforts to serious diseases that require medical interventions. They include diseases in pregnant females, and pregnancies in females with diseases. Adverse Birth Outcomes,Complications, Pregnancy,Adverse Birth Outcome,Birth Outcome, Adverse,Complication, Pregnancy,Outcome, Adverse Birth,Pregnancy Complication
D012008 Recurrence The return of a sign, symptom, or disease after a remission. Recrudescence,Relapse,Recrudescences,Recurrences,Relapses
D012042 Registries The systems and processes involved in the establishment, support, management, and operation of registers, e.g., disease registers. Parish Registers,Population Register,Parish Register,Population Registers,Register, Parish,Register, Population,Registers, Parish,Registers, Population,Registry
D005260 Female Females
D006113 United Kingdom Country in northwestern Europe including Great Britain and the northern one-sixth of the island of Ireland, located between the North Sea and north Atlantic Ocean. The capital is London. Great Britain,Isle of Man
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D000014 Abnormalities, Drug-Induced Congenital abnormalities caused by medicinal substances or drugs of abuse given to or taken by the mother, or to which she is inadvertently exposed during the manufacture of such substances. The concept excludes abnormalities resulting from exposure to non-medicinal chemicals in the environment. Drug-Induced Abnormalities,Abnormalities, Drug Induced,Abnormality, Drug-Induced,Drug Induced Abnormalities,Drug-Induced Abnormality

Related Publications

Ellen Campbell, and Emma Devenney, and Jim Morrow, and Aline Russell, and William Henry Smithson, and Linda Parsons, and Iain Robertson, and Beth Irwin, and Patrick J Morrison, and Stephen Hunt, and John Craig
May 1974, American journal of diseases of children (1960),
Ellen Campbell, and Emma Devenney, and Jim Morrow, and Aline Russell, and William Henry Smithson, and Linda Parsons, and Iain Robertson, and Beth Irwin, and Patrick J Morrison, and Stephen Hunt, and John Craig
October 2015, Epilepsy & behavior : E&B,
Ellen Campbell, and Emma Devenney, and Jim Morrow, and Aline Russell, and William Henry Smithson, and Linda Parsons, and Iain Robertson, and Beth Irwin, and Patrick J Morrison, and Stephen Hunt, and John Craig
January 1975, Pediatrie,
Ellen Campbell, and Emma Devenney, and Jim Morrow, and Aline Russell, and William Henry Smithson, and Linda Parsons, and Iain Robertson, and Beth Irwin, and Patrick J Morrison, and Stephen Hunt, and John Craig
July 2008, Epilepsy & behavior : E&B,
Ellen Campbell, and Emma Devenney, and Jim Morrow, and Aline Russell, and William Henry Smithson, and Linda Parsons, and Iain Robertson, and Beth Irwin, and Patrick J Morrison, and Stephen Hunt, and John Craig
March 2006, Neurology India,
Ellen Campbell, and Emma Devenney, and Jim Morrow, and Aline Russell, and William Henry Smithson, and Linda Parsons, and Iain Robertson, and Beth Irwin, and Patrick J Morrison, and Stephen Hunt, and John Craig
February 1999, Epilepsy research,
Ellen Campbell, and Emma Devenney, and Jim Morrow, and Aline Russell, and William Henry Smithson, and Linda Parsons, and Iain Robertson, and Beth Irwin, and Patrick J Morrison, and Stephen Hunt, and John Craig
July 2000, Epilepsia,
Ellen Campbell, and Emma Devenney, and Jim Morrow, and Aline Russell, and William Henry Smithson, and Linda Parsons, and Iain Robertson, and Beth Irwin, and Patrick J Morrison, and Stephen Hunt, and John Craig
January 2004, JAMA,
Ellen Campbell, and Emma Devenney, and Jim Morrow, and Aline Russell, and William Henry Smithson, and Linda Parsons, and Iain Robertson, and Beth Irwin, and Patrick J Morrison, and Stephen Hunt, and John Craig
July 2014, Tidsskrift for den Norske laegeforening : tidsskrift for praktisk medicin, ny raekke,
Ellen Campbell, and Emma Devenney, and Jim Morrow, and Aline Russell, and William Henry Smithson, and Linda Parsons, and Iain Robertson, and Beth Irwin, and Patrick J Morrison, and Stephen Hunt, and John Craig
September 2014, Tidsskrift for den Norske laegeforening : tidsskrift for praktisk medicin, ny raekke,
Copied contents to your clipboard!