Course Content
Chapter : 04 Addictions and Substance Misuse
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Chapter : 05 Prescribing in Children and Adolescents
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Chapter : 06 Prescribing in older People
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Chapter : 07 Prescribing in Pregnancy and Breastfeeding
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Chapter : 08 Prescribing in Hepatic and Renal Impairment
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Chapter : 09 Drug Treatment of other Psychiatric Conditions
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Chapter : 10 Drug Treatment of Psychiatric Symptoms Occurring in the Context of other conditions
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Chapter : 12 Other Substances
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Chapter : 13 Psychotropic Drugs in Special conditions
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Chapter : 14 Miscellany
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Maudsley Made Easy 3.0
    About Lesson
    Perinatal Prescribing Pathfinder

    The Perinatal Prescribing Pathfinder

    Navigating medication choices during pregnancy and breastfeeding with confidence.

    Foundations: Risks & Realities

    Remember: Even without medication, pregnancy carries inherent risks.

    • Spontaneous abortion: 10-20% of confirmed early pregnancies.
    • Major malformations: 2-3% of newborns.

    Smoking, poor diet, alcohol use, and pre-pregnancy obesity negatively impact fetal outcomes. Obesity specifically increases neural tube defect risk.

    Psychiatric illness during pregnancy is itself a risk factor for:

    • Congenital malformations, stillbirths, neonatal deaths.
    • Negative child outcomes persisting into adolescence.
    • Life-threatening obstetric complications for the mother (especially with SMI).
    • Lack of active treatment (especially psychotropics for SMI) is associated with perinatal suicides.

    Withholding necessary medication solely due to pregnancy/lactation is generally discouraged.

    Establishing clear safety profiles is difficult:

    • Ethical constraints prevent robust randomised controlled trials (RCTs).
    • Observational studies struggle to control for confounders (the illness itself, lifestyle factors, other meds).
    • Information evolves as more data becomes available. Interpret data cautiously.

    The Balancing Act

    Risks of Untreated Illness

    (Mother & Fetus/Infant)

    vs.
    Risks of Medication

    (Potential Fetal/Neonatal Effects)

    Informed patient choice based on this balance is crucial.

    Guiding Principles

    For All Women of Child-Bearing Potential:

    • Always discuss possibility of pregnancy (half are unplanned).
    • Avoid known harmful drugs (Valproate, Topiramate, Carbamazepine) unless essential.
    • If essential, ensure full understanding of risks and reliable long-term contraception.

    If Mental Illness is Newly Diagnosed During Pregnancy:

    • Prioritise non-pharmacological treatments first.
    • If medication needed: Try to avoid 1st trimester (organogenesis) unless benefits clearly outweigh risks.
    • Choose well-established drugs.
    • Use lowest effective dose.
    • Regularly review need, stop ineffective meds.

    If a Woman on Psychotropics Plans Pregnancy:

    • Consider discontinuing treatment only if well, low relapse risk (thorough review needed).
    • For SMI/high relapse risk: Stopping generally not advisable. Consider switching cautiously to lower-risk drug (but switching itself carries relapse risk).
    • Address drug-induced hyperprolactinaemia (affects fertility).
    • Refer women with SMI for pre-conception counselling with perinatal specialist.

    If a Woman on Psychotropics Discovers She is Pregnant:

    • Do not abruptly stop if SMI/high relapse risk (relapse often more harmful).
    • Often better to continue current effective medication than switch (minimises relapse risk, limits fetal exposure).
    • Valproate must be stopped immediately (discuss appropriate taper if applicable, though risk already incurred).
    • Review treatment plan early, as mood can fluctuate.

    General Approach During Pregnancy:

    • Involve parents in decisions.
    • Use minimum number of drugs necessary (concurrently/sequentially).
    • Use lowest effective dose.
    • Be prepared to adjust doses (esp. upwards in 3rd trimester due to volume/enzyme changes). Plasma level monitoring can help (e.g., Lithium, Clozapine, Lamotrigine).
    • Refer women with SMI to specialist perinatal services.
    • Liaise with obstetric services (fetal screening).
    • Inform obstetric/neonatal teams about meds and potential complications.
    • Monitor newborn for withdrawal effects.
    • Document all decisions and plans clearly.
    • Consider fetal anomaly scans (e.g., 13 or 18-20 week ultrasound).

    If the Patient Smokes:

    • Smoking significantly increases risks for poor pregnancy outcomes.
    • Strongly encourage switching to Nicotine Replacement Therapy (NRT) and refer to cessation services.
    • Vaping likely safer than smoking but carries risks; NRT generally preferred.
    • Be aware stopping smoking can increase plasma levels of certain drugs (e.g., Clozapine, Olanzapine).

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    Breastfeeding Considerations

    • Offers significant long-term physical health and cognitive benefits for the child.
    • Generally encouraged for at least the first 6 months.
    • Concerns about medication safety can influence mother's decision.

    RID is an estimate of the infant's dose relative to the mother's dose (adjusted for weight).

    RID = (Infant Dose [mg/kg/day] / Maternal Dose [mg/kg/day]) * 100%

    • Calculated using assumed milk intake (150mL/kg/day) and milk drug concentration.
    • Infant plasma levels are a better measure but rarely available.
    • RID < 10% is generally considered compatible with breastfeeding.
    • Infant plasma levels < 10% of maternal levels also suggest safety threshold.
    • RID values are estimates and vary between studies. Use as a guide only.
    • Plan Ahead: Discuss breastfeeding safety when considering psychotropics pre-conception or early in pregnancy.
    • Avoid Switching: Don't switch meds late pregnancy/postpartum solely for breastfeeding (increases maternal relapse risk).
    • Continue When Possible: Usually continue the drug used during pregnancy (minimises infant withdrawal), unless known contraindication (Lithium, Clozapine).
    • Risk vs. Benefit: Weigh breastfeeding benefits against infant drug exposure risks. Consider infant health/gestational age (premature/unwell infants are more vulnerable).
    • Prioritize Maternal Treatment: Don't withhold necessary treatment. If best drug is contraindicated, advise bottle-feeding.
    • Starting Postpartum: Consider previous response; prefer drugs with low RID/plasma levels.
    • Half-Life: Be mindful of long half-life drugs accumulating in infant.
    • Monitoring: Watch infant for side effects (sedation, feeding issues, irritability, specific drug effects). Consider infant plasma levels if toxicity suspected.
    • Safe Sleep: Advise against bed-sharing if mother is on sedating medication.
    • Lowest Effective Dose / Minimize Polypharmacy.

    (Remember: Continuing pregnancy drug is usually preferred, except for Clozapine/Lithium).

    • Antidepressants: Sertraline often considered first-line. Others available (see Navigator).
    • Antipsychotics: Olanzapine or Quetiapine may be considered. Avoid breastfeeding if taking Clozapine.
    • Mood Stabilisers: Mood-stabilising antipsychotics (Olanzapine/Quetiapine) may be considered. Avoid breastfeeding if taking Lithium.
    • Sedatives/Hypnotics: Best avoided. If necessary, choose short half-life.

    Clinical Scenarios: Apply Your Knowledge

    Scenario 1: Planning Pregnancy on Valproate

    A 28-year-old woman with Bipolar I disorder, stable on sodium valproate (1000mg/day) for 3 years, expresses a desire to start trying for a baby within the next 6 months.

    What is the MOST critical first step?

    Scenario 2: Depression Discovered in Pregnancy

    A 32-year-old woman, 14 weeks pregnant (planned), presents with her first episode of moderate-severe depression. Non-pharmacological measures (CBT referral initiated) haven't been sufficient. She has no prior psychiatric history.

    Which antidepressant class is generally considered a reasonable first-line choice in pregnancy according to ACOG/COPE recommendations?

    Scenario 3: Breastfeeding on Lithium

    A 35-year-old woman managed effectively on Lithium for Bipolar I disorder during pregnancy (with close monitoring) has just delivered. She wants to breastfeed.

    What is the standard recommendation regarding Lithium and breastfeeding?

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