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Antipsychotic drug use in pregnancy: A multinational study from ten countries.

Authors :
Reutfors, Johan
Cesta, Carolyn E.
Cohen, Jacqueline M.
Bateman, Brian T.
Brauer, Ruth
Einarsdóttir, Kristjana
Engeland, Anders
Furu, Kari
Gissler, Mika
Havard, Alys
Hernandez-Diaz, Sonia
Huybrechts, Krista F.
Karlstad, Øystein
Leinonen, Maarit K.
Li, Jiong
Man, Kenneth K.C.
Pazzagli, Laura
Schaffer, Andrea
Schink, Tania
Wang, Zixuan
Source :
Schizophrenia Research. Jun2020, Vol. 220, p106-115. 10p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

<bold>Aim: </bold>To compare the prevalence and trends of antipsychotic drug use during pregnancy between countries across four continents.<bold>Methods: </bold>Individually linked health data in Denmark (2000-2012), Finland (2005-2014), Iceland (2004-2017), Norway (2005-2015), Sweden (2006-2015), Germany (2006-2015), Australia (New South Wales, 2004-2012), Hong Kong (2001-2015), UK (2006-2016), and the US (Medicaid, 2000-2013, and IBM MarketScan, 2012-2015) were used. Using a uniformed approach, we estimated the prevalence of antipsychotic use as the proportion of pregnancies where a woman filled at least one antipsychotic prescription within three months before pregnancy until birth. For the Nordic countries, data were meta-analyzed to investigate maternal characteristics associated with the use of antipsychotics.<bold>Results: </bold>We included 8,394,343 pregnancies. Typical antipsychotic use was highest in the UK (4.4%) whereas atypical antipsychotic use was highest in the US Medicaid (1.5%). Atypical antipsychotic use increased over time in most populations, reaching 2% in Australia (2012) and US Medicaid (2013). In most countries, prochlorperazine was the most commonly used typical antipsychotic and quetiapine the most commonly used atypical antipsychotic. Use of antipsychotics decreased across the trimesters of pregnancy in all populations except Finland. Antipsychotic use was elevated among smokers and those with parity ≥4 in the Nordic countries.<bold>Conclusion: </bold>Antipsychotic use during pregnancy varied considerably between populations, partly explained by varying use of the typical antipsychotic prochlorperazine, which is often used for nausea and vomiting in early pregnancy. Increasing usage of atypical antipsychotics among pregnant women reflects the pattern that was previously reported for the general population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09209964
Volume :
220
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Schizophrenia Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
143799827
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.schres.2020.03.048