Guest guest Posted August 21, 2004 Report Share Posted August 21, 2004 http://depts.washington.edu/druginfo/DTT/2002_Vol31_Files/V31N2.pdf A University of Washington / Harborview Medical Center Drug Information Center publication Distributed monthly by authority of the Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee Editor: Nelda A. Murri, Pharm.D. (206) 598-6612 – Asst. Editor: Elizabeth Rudy, D.V.M., R.Ph. Department of Pharmacy Services / School of Pharmacy 2002 by the University of Washington Also published on the World Wide Web at http://uw.prnrx.org/therapyTopics.asp No material may be reproduced in whole or in part without written permission from the editor. Vol. 31 No. 2 - Feb. 2002 University of Washington Medical Center / Harborview Medical Center ISSN 0882-6684 drug therapy topics (Continued on page 8) SSRI Antidepressant Withdrawal Syndrome in Newborns by Elizabeth Rudy, D.V.M., R.Ph. Editor’s Note: Adverse drug reactions experienced by UWMC or HMC patients and reported to the pharmacy are reviewed quarterly by the Pharmacy & Therapeutics Committee. Following the Committee’s review, a summary is published in this newsletter (see page 9) along with a companion article regarding some aspect of adverse drug reactions. It is hoped that these articles will be useful tools to remind prescribers of the fundamental principle of pharmacology that states, “No drug has only one action.” By reminding prescribers to be alert to the appearance of undesired and unintended actions of drugs, therapeutic outcomes may be improved and adverse events minimized. If you have a patient you feel is experiencing an Adverse Drug Reaction, report it by calling the A.D.R. Phone Line, HMC: 731-3802; UWMC: 598-6837; SCCA: 288-6336. The use of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (fluoxetine, paroxetine, sertraline, fluvoxamine, and citalopram) to treat depression during pregnancy has become increasingly popular, in part due to studies that indicate that these antidepressants are unlikely to be teratogenic at therapeutic doses.1 However, case reports have appeared sporadically in the medical literature describing withdrawal symptoms in neonates whose mothers took these medications during pregnancy. The purpose of this Focus is to explore what potential adverse effects prenatal exposure to SSRI antidepressants may have on the newborn. A variety of symptoms, most commonly involving the central nervous system and the gastrointestinal system, have been observed in neonates experiencing selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressant withdrawal.2 Nordeng et al. described withdrawal symptoms in five infants exposed to SSRI antidepressants prenatally. 2 These neonates exhibited symptoms of irritability, constant crying, shivering, increased tonus, eating and sleeping difficulties, and seizures. Stiskal et al. described jitteriness, vomiting, irritability, hypoglycemia, and necrotizing enterocolitis in four infants exposed prenatally to paroxetine.3 In adults, similar SSRI withdrawal symptoms have been observed.3 In the above prenatal exposures, most of the pregnant women took the SSRI antidepressant throughout the pregnancy or started taking it in the second or third trimester and continued through term. In their 1996 study on birth outcomes in pregnant women taking fluoxetine (ProzacR), Chambers et al. reported that of the 73 infants exposed to the drug in the third trimester, 31.5% exhibited symptoms of “poor neonatal adaptation” that included respiratory difficulties, irritability, jitteriness, and cyanosis on feeding.4 As of March 2001, there were a total of 13 reports to the Australian Drug Reaction Advisory Committee that were described as neonatal withdrawal syndrome in conjunction with maternal use of an SSRI antidepressant.5 Additionally, there are scattered case reports in the medical literature describing neonatal withdrawal symptoms in infants exposed prenatally to SSRI antidepressants: 10 reports involved paroxetine, 2 reports involved sertraline, 1 report involved citalopram, and 3 reports involved fluoxetine.2,3,6-12 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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