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Underused Antidepressant For Postnatal Depression Improves Child Outcomes

by Colleen Fleiss on August 29, 2023 at 10:54 PM
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Treatment with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) for postnatal depression has been associated with enhancements in child behavior that persist for up to five years following childbirth, stated research led by the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN) at King's College London. The study has been published in JAMA Network Open ().


Up to 15% of women experience postnatal depression which has been shown to be associated with poor outcomes for mothers' and their children. Researchers at King's IoPPN, in collaboration with the University of Oslo, analysed data from over 61,000 mothers and their children recruited during pregnancy from the Norwegian Mother, Father and Child Cohort Study. The researchers investigated how postnatal SSRI treatment modified the negative outcomes associated with postnatal depression in mothers and their children.

Positive Impacts of SSRI Treatment for Postnatal Depression

These included reduced child behavioral difficulties (such as conduct problems and antisocial behavior), child ADHD symptoms and maternal depression, as well as improved satisfaction in partner relationships. The findings suggest that SSRI treatment could bring mid- to long-term benefits to women with postnatal depression and their children by reducing the risk of several negative outcomes that are associated with postnatal depression.

‘Mothers receiving SSRI treatment for postnatal depression were found to experience more favorable outcomes up to five years after childbirth compared to those with postnatal depression who did not take SSRIs. #ssri #antidepressant #postnataldepression’

Dr. Kate Liu, Research Associate at King's IoPPN and first author of the study, said: "Postnatal depression is a common psychiatric disorder that affects 10 to 15 percent of women in the first year after childbirth. In the UK however, only three percent of women with postnatal depression receive SSRI treatment. This is likely due to a lack of awareness of postnatal depression, alongside concerns about the long-term impact that taking antidepressant medications in the postnatal period may have on child outcomes. Our study found no evidence suggesting that postnatal SSRI treatment conferred an increased risk for child development. In fact, we found that postnatal SSRI treatment reduced maternal depression and child behavioral difficulties that are associated with postnatal depression."

Of the 61,081 mothers recruited in week 17-18 of pregnancy, 8,671 met the diagnostic criteria for postnatal depression at six months postpartum and 177 of these received postnatal SSRI treatment. Mother and child outcomes, including maternal depression and child emotional and behavioral difficulties, were measured when the child was ages 1.5, three and five. Maternal reported partner relationship satisfaction was measured at six months, 1.5 years and three years postpartum.

Alleviating Associations Between Postnatal Depression and Maternal Outcomes

Postnatal SSRI treatment mitigated the association between postnatal depression and maternal depression at 1.5 and five years postpartum, child behavioral difficulties at ages 1.5 and five years, ADHD symptoms at age five, and relationship satisfaction across all measured timepoints. In addition, postnatal SSRI treatment mitigated the negative association between postnatal depression symptoms and maternal depression at five years postpartum even when the level of postnatal depression did not meet the researchers' diagnostic threshold.

Dr. Tom McAdams, Wellcome Trust Senior Research Fellow at King's IoPPN and senior author of the study, said: "Postnatal depression is under-recognized and undertreated. It's critical that we view it as the severe mental illness that it is and ensure it is treated properly to mitigate some of the associated negative outcomes in mothers, children and wider family. Our study found no evidence that SSRI treatment for mothers affected by postnatal depression was linked with an increased risk for childhood emotional difficulties, behavioral problems or motor and language delay."

The study was supported by funding from Wellcome and The Research Council of Norway.

Reference:
  1. Long-Term Maternal and Child Outcomes Following Postnatal SSRI Treatment - (https:jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2808867)
Source: Eurekalert

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