Fetal loss and malformations in the MONEAD study of pregnant women with epilepsy.

Neurology

From Stanford University (K.J.M.), CA; Brigham & Women's Hospital (P.B.P., L.V.M., T.F.M.), Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Emmes (R.C.M., C.B.), Rockville, MD; Northwestern University (E.G.), Evanston, IL; University of Southern California (L.K.), Los Angeles; Emory University (E.G.), Atlanta, GA; Minnesota Epilepsy Group (P.P.), St. Paul; University of Cincinnati (J.C.), OH; New York University (J.F.); Northwell Heath (S.H.); Columbia University (A.M.P.), New York, NY; Wake Forest University (M.S.), Winston-Salem, NC; University of Minnesota (A.K.B.), Minneapolis; and Baylor College of Medicine (R.F.), Houston, TX.

Published: April 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • *Methods*: This research was part of the MONEAD study, a multi-center NIH-funded project that observed pregnancy outcomes in women enrolled from December 2012 to January 2016.
  • *Results*: The study found that SAOs were significantly more common in PWWE (7.9%) compared to HPW (1.9%), although there were no key differences in fetal loss or MCM rates individually. Overall, the majority of pregnancies in women with epilepsy did not result

Article Abstract

Objective: To examine occurrence of severe adverse fetal outcomes (SAO), including fetal loss and major congenital malformations (MCMs), in pregnant women with epilepsy (PWWE) vs healthy pregnant women (HPW).

Methods: The Maternal Outcomes and Neurodevelopmental Effects of Antiepileptic Drugs (MONEAD) study is an NIH-funded, prospective, observational, multicenter investigation of pregnancy outcomes for both mother and child, which enrolled women December 2012 through January 2016.

Results: The 351 PWWE had 365 conceptions, and 105 HPW had 109 conceptions. SAOs occurred more often in PWWE (7.9%) vs HPW (1.9%) ( = 0.025) with odds ratio (OR) 4.45 (95% confidence intervals [CI] 1.04-19.01). There were no significant differences for fetal loss (2.8% vs 0%, = 0.126) or MCMs (5.2% vs 1.9%, = 0.185; OR 2.86, 95% CI 0.65-12.53) individually. No fetal losses in PWWE appeared to be related to acute seizures. Outcomes were not affected by periconceptional folate, unplanned/unwanted pregnancies, prior maternal pregnancy history, or antiepileptic drug (AED) blood levels, except for an AED level effect for fetal loss that appeared to be due to polytherapy. Combined maternal or paternal family history of MCM was marginally associated with increased SAOs ( = 0.046).

Conclusions: The findings provide additional information on risks of SAOs in PWWE, assessing effects of both AED levels and periconceptional folate. Group differences in average enrollment gestational age could have affected fetal loss results. Analyses are limited by small sample sizes as the MONEAD study was not powered for these secondary outcomes. The large majority of pregnancies in women with epilepsy do not have SOAs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7251524PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000008687DOI Listing

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