CE/CME / PEER REVIEWED

Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder: Diagnosis and Management in Primary Care

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References

Treatment challenges

PMDD treatment differs for each patient.3 Severity of symptoms, response to treatment, treatment preference, conception plans, and reproductive age need to be considered.3

Women with prominent depressive or physical symptoms may respond better to continuous dosing of SSRIs, whereas those with prominent irritability, anger, and mood swings may respond better to a symptom-onset SSRI regimen that reduces availability and function of ALLO.3 Women who develop tolerance to SSRIs may need to have their dosage increased or be switched to another medication.3Quetiapine is used as an adjunct to SSRIs for women who do not respond to SSRIs alone and has shown to improve mood swings, anxiety, and irritability.5 However, women experiencing persistent adverse effects of SSRIs, such as sexual dysfunction, may benefit from intermittent dosing.3

Adolescents and women in their early 20s should be treated with OCs or nonpharmacologic modalities due to concerns about SSRI use and increased risk for suicidality in this population.3 The risks related to SSRI use during pregnancy and breastfeeding should be considered and discussed with women of childbearing age who use SSRIs to treat PMDD.3 Perimenopausal women with irregular menses on intermittent ­SSRIs may have to switch to symptom-onset or continuous dosing due to the difficulty of tracking the menstrual period and lack of significant benchmarks regarding when to start the treatment.3

Patient education/follow-up

Patients should be educated on PMDD etiology, diagnostic process, and available treatment options.4 The importance of prospective record-keeping—for confirmation of the diagnosis and evaluation of individual response to a specific treatment—should be emphasized.4 Patients should be encouraged to follow up with their health care provider to monitor treatment effectiveness, possible adverse effects, and need for treatment adjustment.4

CONCLUSION

The symptoms of PMDD can have a debilitating and life-disrupting impact on affected women—and put them at risk for other serious psychiatric disorders and suicide. The DSM-5 criteria provide diagnostic guidance to help distinguish PMDD from other underlying conditions, ensuring that patients can receive timely and appropriate treatment. While SSRIs are regarded as the most effective option, other evidence-based treatments should be considered, since PMDD requires individualized treatment to ensure optimal clinical outcomes.

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