4.4 Article

Psychiatric visits during the postpartum year in women with eating disorders who continue or discontinue antidepressant treatment in pregnancy

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EATING DISORDERS
Volume 56, Issue 3, Pages 582-594

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eat.23877

Keywords

antidepressant; eating disorders; postpartum; pregnancy; preventative effect

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This study found no association between continued antidepressant use during pregnancy and postpartum psychiatric visits for eating disorders or mood/anxiety disorders in women with preexisting eating disorders. However, continuation of antidepressant treatment into the early postpartum was associated with a reduced likelihood of postpartum visits for eating disorders.
ObjectiveTo determine the association between continued antidepressant use in pregnancy and postpartum psychiatric visits for eating (ED) or mood/anxiety disorders in women with preexisting ED. MethodUsing Danish health registry data (1998-2015), we identified 3529 pregnancies in women with ED prepregnancy: (i) 564 with continued antidepressant use before and during pregnancy; (ii) 778 with discontinued antidepressants before pregnancy; (iii) 2137 unexposed. Outpatient and inpatient postpartum visits for an ED or a mood/anxiety disorder constituted the outcome measures. We estimated hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) using Cox regression with inverse probability of treatment weighting, and performed stratified analyses by antidepressant prescription filling in the first 3 months postpartum. ResultsThe weighted cumulative incidence for an ED visit at end of follow-up was 4.5% (continued) and 4.8% (discontinued). We found no association between continued antidepressant and postpartum ED visit, relative to discontinued (HR: 0.89, 95% CI: 0.52-1.52). The HR for postpartum mood/anxiety disorder visit was 1.27 (95% CI: 0.68-2.36) with continued antidepressants versus discontinued but decreased if more than two antidepressant prescriptions were refilled. Continued antidepressant use was associated with a 57% reduced likelihood of a postpartum ED visit versus discontinued use in pregnancies with antidepressant prescription refills in the early postpartum. ConclusionAmong women with preexisting ED, there was no association between continued antidepressant use during pregnancy and the likelihood of postpartum psychiatric visits, relative to discontinued antidepressants before pregnancy. Continuation of treatment into the early postpartum is associated with reduced likelihood of postpartum ED visit. Public SignificanceBased on data from the Danish registries, we identified 3529 pregnancies among women with preexisting eating disorders before pregnancy. Women with continued antidepressant treatment both before and during pregnancy did not have a lower probability of having postpartum psychiatric visits for an eating disorder or for mood/anxiety disorders (often coexisting with eating disorders), relative to those who discontinued antidepressants before pregnancy. Further continuation of antidepressant treatment into the early postpartum is associated with improved maternal postpartum outcomes. However, residual confounding by disease severity limits confidence in this conclusion.

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