Prescription of antiepileptic medicines including valproate in pregnant women: a study in three European countries

Purpose: To study patterns of antiepileptic drugs (AED) prescribing, particularly valproate, during pregnancy over a 10-year period in the UK, Italy, and France. Methods: Data on pregnancies conceived after 1 January 2007 with outcomes before 31 December 2016 were extracted from four European electr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety 2019-11, Vol.28 (11), p.1510-1518
Hauptverfasser: Hurault-Delarue, Caroline, Morris, Joan, Charlton, Rachel, Gini, Rosa, Loane, Maria, Pierini, Anna, Puccini, Aurora, Neville, Amanda, Snowball, Julia, Damase-Michel, Christine
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Purpose: To study patterns of antiepileptic drugs (AED) prescribing, particularly valproate, during pregnancy over a 10-year period in the UK, Italy, and France. Methods: Data on pregnancies conceived after 1 January 2007 with outcomes before 31 December 2016 were extracted from four European electronic health care databases (380 499 in the United Kingdom (UK), 66 681 in France, and 649 918 in Italy [355 767 in Emilia Romagna and 294 151 in Tuscany]). Prevalence of AEDs with an ATC code starting N03A and clobazam (N05BA09) were stratified by country and calendar year. Results: AED prescribing during pregnancy varied from 3.0 (2.8-3.1) per 1000 pregnancies in Emilia Romagna to 7.8 (7.5-8.0) in the UK, 5.9 (5.6-6.1) in Tuscany, and 6.3 (5.7-6.9) in France. Lamotrigine was commonly prescribed in all regions with a third of women exposed to an AED during pregnancy taking lamotrigine in the UK and France. Valproate was prescribed to 28.6% of AED exposed pregnant women in Tuscany, 21.6% in France, 16.7% in Emilia Romagna, and 11.9% in the UK. Over the study period, the prevalence of AED prescribing increased in the UK mainly due to increases in pregabalin and gabapentin, declined in France mainly related to decreases in clonazepam, and remained constant in Italy. Valproate prescriptions declined to a prevalence
ISSN:1053-8569
1099-1557
1099-1557
DOI:10.1002/pds.4897