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Self-reported perinatal depressive symptoms and postnatal symptom severity after treatment with antidepressants in pregnancy: a cross-sectional study across 12 European countries using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale

PURPOSE: This study aimed at exploring the prevalence of self-reported antenatal and postnatal depressive symptoms by severity across multiple countries and the association between antidepressant treatment in pregnancy and postnatal symptom severity. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This was a multinational w...

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Autores principales: Lupattelli, Angela, Twigg, Michael J, Zagorodnikova, Ksenia, Moretti, Myla E, Drozd, Mariola, Panchaud, Alice, Rieutord, Andre, Juraski, Romana Gjergja, Odalovic, Marina, Kennedy, Debra, Rudolf, Gorazd, Juch, Herbert, Nordeng, Hedvig
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5997125/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29922092
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CLEP.S156210
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author Lupattelli, Angela
Twigg, Michael J
Zagorodnikova, Ksenia
Moretti, Myla E
Drozd, Mariola
Panchaud, Alice
Rieutord, Andre
Juraski, Romana Gjergja
Odalovic, Marina
Kennedy, Debra
Rudolf, Gorazd
Juch, Herbert
Nordeng, Hedvig
author_facet Lupattelli, Angela
Twigg, Michael J
Zagorodnikova, Ksenia
Moretti, Myla E
Drozd, Mariola
Panchaud, Alice
Rieutord, Andre
Juraski, Romana Gjergja
Odalovic, Marina
Kennedy, Debra
Rudolf, Gorazd
Juch, Herbert
Nordeng, Hedvig
author_sort Lupattelli, Angela
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: This study aimed at exploring the prevalence of self-reported antenatal and postnatal depressive symptoms by severity across multiple countries and the association between antidepressant treatment in pregnancy and postnatal symptom severity. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This was a multinational web-based study conducted across 12 European countries (n=8069). Uniform data collection was ensured via an electronic questionnaire. Pregnant women at any gestational week and mothers of children with <1 year of age could participate. We used the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) to measure the prevalence of antenatal and postnatal depressive symptoms according to severity, which were corrected by survey weight adjustment (descriptive analysis). Within mothers with a psychiatric disorder (n=173), we estimated the association between antidepressant treatment in pregnancy and postnatal depressive symptom severity, as standardized EPDS mean scores, via the inverse probability of treatment weight (association analysis). RESULTS: In the descriptive analysis (n=8069), the period prevalence of moderate-to-very severe depressive symptoms was higher in the western and eastern regions relative to the northern region, both in the antenatal period (6.8%–7.5% vs 4.3%) and in the postnatal period (7.6% vs 4.7%). One in two mothers with psychiatric disorders used an antidepressant in pregnancy (86 of 173). In the association analysis, women medicated at any time during pregnancy (adjusted β=−0.34, 95% confidence interval [CI] =−0.66, −0.02) had a significant postnatal symptom severity reduction compared with the nonmedicated counterpart. This effect was larger (β=−0.74, 95% CI =−1.24, −0.24) when the analysis was restricted to mothers within 6 months after childbirth. CONCLUSION: The prevalence of self-reported antenatal and postnatal depressive symptoms differs across European countries. Among women with psychiatric disorders, those who had been on treatment with antidepressants during pregnancy were less likely to report postnatal depressive symptoms, particularly within the 6-month period after childbirth, compared with the nonmedicated counterpart.
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spelling pubmed-59971252018-06-19 Self-reported perinatal depressive symptoms and postnatal symptom severity after treatment with antidepressants in pregnancy: a cross-sectional study across 12 European countries using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale Lupattelli, Angela Twigg, Michael J Zagorodnikova, Ksenia Moretti, Myla E Drozd, Mariola Panchaud, Alice Rieutord, Andre Juraski, Romana Gjergja Odalovic, Marina Kennedy, Debra Rudolf, Gorazd Juch, Herbert Nordeng, Hedvig Clin Epidemiol Original Research PURPOSE: This study aimed at exploring the prevalence of self-reported antenatal and postnatal depressive symptoms by severity across multiple countries and the association between antidepressant treatment in pregnancy and postnatal symptom severity. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This was a multinational web-based study conducted across 12 European countries (n=8069). Uniform data collection was ensured via an electronic questionnaire. Pregnant women at any gestational week and mothers of children with <1 year of age could participate. We used the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) to measure the prevalence of antenatal and postnatal depressive symptoms according to severity, which were corrected by survey weight adjustment (descriptive analysis). Within mothers with a psychiatric disorder (n=173), we estimated the association between antidepressant treatment in pregnancy and postnatal depressive symptom severity, as standardized EPDS mean scores, via the inverse probability of treatment weight (association analysis). RESULTS: In the descriptive analysis (n=8069), the period prevalence of moderate-to-very severe depressive symptoms was higher in the western and eastern regions relative to the northern region, both in the antenatal period (6.8%–7.5% vs 4.3%) and in the postnatal period (7.6% vs 4.7%). One in two mothers with psychiatric disorders used an antidepressant in pregnancy (86 of 173). In the association analysis, women medicated at any time during pregnancy (adjusted β=−0.34, 95% confidence interval [CI] =−0.66, −0.02) had a significant postnatal symptom severity reduction compared with the nonmedicated counterpart. This effect was larger (β=−0.74, 95% CI =−1.24, −0.24) when the analysis was restricted to mothers within 6 months after childbirth. CONCLUSION: The prevalence of self-reported antenatal and postnatal depressive symptoms differs across European countries. Among women with psychiatric disorders, those who had been on treatment with antidepressants during pregnancy were less likely to report postnatal depressive symptoms, particularly within the 6-month period after childbirth, compared with the nonmedicated counterpart. Dove Medical Press 2018-06-06 /pmc/articles/PMC5997125/ /pubmed/29922092 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CLEP.S156210 Text en © 2018 Lupattelli et al. This work is published and licensed by Dove Medical Press Limited The full terms of this license are available at https://www.dovepress.com/terms.php and incorporate the Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/). By accessing the work you hereby accept the Terms. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed.
spellingShingle Original Research
Lupattelli, Angela
Twigg, Michael J
Zagorodnikova, Ksenia
Moretti, Myla E
Drozd, Mariola
Panchaud, Alice
Rieutord, Andre
Juraski, Romana Gjergja
Odalovic, Marina
Kennedy, Debra
Rudolf, Gorazd
Juch, Herbert
Nordeng, Hedvig
Self-reported perinatal depressive symptoms and postnatal symptom severity after treatment with antidepressants in pregnancy: a cross-sectional study across 12 European countries using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale
title Self-reported perinatal depressive symptoms and postnatal symptom severity after treatment with antidepressants in pregnancy: a cross-sectional study across 12 European countries using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale
title_full Self-reported perinatal depressive symptoms and postnatal symptom severity after treatment with antidepressants in pregnancy: a cross-sectional study across 12 European countries using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale
title_fullStr Self-reported perinatal depressive symptoms and postnatal symptom severity after treatment with antidepressants in pregnancy: a cross-sectional study across 12 European countries using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale
title_full_unstemmed Self-reported perinatal depressive symptoms and postnatal symptom severity after treatment with antidepressants in pregnancy: a cross-sectional study across 12 European countries using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale
title_short Self-reported perinatal depressive symptoms and postnatal symptom severity after treatment with antidepressants in pregnancy: a cross-sectional study across 12 European countries using the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale
title_sort self-reported perinatal depressive symptoms and postnatal symptom severity after treatment with antidepressants in pregnancy: a cross-sectional study across 12 european countries using the edinburgh postnatal depression scale
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5997125/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29922092
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CLEP.S156210
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