Antiseizure drugs use during pregnancy and congenital malformations: A retrospective review from the United Arab Emirates
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Elsevier B.V.
Abstract
Objective: To observe the incidence of congenital malformations occurring in foetuses exposed to antiseizure drugs (ASDs) during the first trimester and to identify individual drug associations in a population cohort from the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Methods: Pregnancy outcomes were observed and reported from women with epilepsy (WWE), attending the Obstetric Medicine Neurology Clinic at Corniche Hospital in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates (UAE) from February 2008 to December 2015. Results: Outcome data were available for 179 pregnancies in 112 WWE. There were 139 pregnancies who received ASD treatment during the first trimester, of these 124 were on monotherapy. Thirteen (7.26 %) congenital malformations (CMs) were observed in this cohort, seven were major ones and six were minor. Thirteen of the CMs were from the group with ASDs while one had no ASD-exposure. From the ASD-group, we identified 32 (23.0 %) with poor pregnancy outcomes, including 13 (9.3 %) with CMs and 19 (13.7 %) miscarriages. These figures were significantly higher than that of the no ASD-exposure group (7.9 %) (p = 0.04, Fisher test). The most commonly used ASDs in monotherapy were levetiracetam (25.6 %), carbamazepine (16.2 %), valproate (13.4 %), and lamotrigine (7.3 %). There were 57 (31.8 %) consanguineous marriages in this cohort; there was no statistically significant difference in the CM rate within the consanguineous group between those with and without exposure to ASD. Conclusion: This study was the first to report pregnancy outcomes in a WWE cohort from the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. It is the first step towards establishing a national / regional pregnancy registry to create a database on ASD use and pregnancy outcomes among the WWE. © 2019
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Antiseizure drugs use during pregnancy, Congenital malformations, Consanguinity, United arab emirates, Women with epilepsy, Abnormalities, drug-induced, Adult, Anticonvulsants, Epilepsy, Female, Humans, Incidence, Pregnancy, Pregnancy complications, Pregnancy outcome, Retrospective studies, Anticonvulsive agent, Carbamazepine, Lamotrigine, Levetiracetam, Valproic acid, Article, Cohort analysis, Congenital malformation, Consanguineous marriage, Drug use, First trimester pregnancy, Human, Major clinical study, Priority journal, Retrospective study, Spontaneous abortion, Treatment outcome, Drug induced malformation, Pregnancy complication