Commentary

SSRI exposure during pregnancy: What’s enough data?


 

References

What is also ironic is that there is common use of other medications during pregnancy for which there are vastly less available reproductive safety data. These medicines would include, for example, sedative hypnotics or antibiotics; so why the enormous concern about SSRIs? One has to wonder whether the scrutiny about SSRIs is not about using the medication but is related to bias regarding the use of a medicine during pregnancy to treat an illness such as depression, where many people, including clinicians, would discount the devastating effect of depression on women’s lives – as well as the evolving data on the impact of untreated psychiatric illness on fetal well-being, and the well-documented association between psychiatric illness during pregnancy and increased risk for postpartum depression.

Ironically, the availability of more data has not made it easier for the clinician but has brought about a need for greater scrutiny; the conversation about this issue is probably good for the field. Ultimately, decisions about what women choose to do will be made on a case-by-case basis, as individuals make the decision with their doctors and partners using available data in the context of their individual clinical situations, factoring in severity of illness as well as their own individual wishes.

Dr. Cohen is the director of the Center for Women’s Mental Health at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, which provides information about reproductive mental health at www.womensmentalhealth.org. He is a consultant to manufacturers of antidepressant medications. He was an author of the NEJM study, which was funded by the U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and the National Institutes of Health. To comment, e-mail him at obnews@frontlinemedcom.com.

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