Study
links Prozac, Paxil use with birth defects
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[July 10, 2015] By
Ellen Wulfhorst
(Reuters) - A sweeping government study of
thousands of women has found links between the older antidepressants
Prozac and Paxil and birth defects, but has cleared other popular
treatments in the class, including Celexa, Lexapro and Pfizer's Zoloft,
which is the subject of a major lawsuit over birth defect claims.
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Earlier studies had raised questions about antidepressants in a
class of drugs known as Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors or
SSRIs, prompting the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2005 to
issue a safety warning about use of the treatments during pregnancy.
In the current study, published on Wednesday in the British Medical
Journal, researchers at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention wanted to see if the birth defect risk affected the
entire class of drugs, or only select treatments.
For the study, the researchers asked nearly 28,000 women if they
took Celexa, Lexapro, Prozac, Paxil or Zoloft any time from one
month before conception through the third month of pregnancy and
analyzed which women bore children with birth defects.
They found that many popular antidepressants - Celexa, Lexapro or
Zoloft - are not associated with birth defects. Only two in the
study, Prozac, sold generically as paroxetine, and Paxil, sold
generically as fluoxetine, were implicated.
In women who took those two drugs early in pregnancy, birth defects
occurred 2 to 3.5 more frequently compared with women who did not
take them.
Prozac use was associated with a birth defect in which a baby's
skull is misshapen. Paxil use was associated with a defect in which
a baby's intestines protrude outside the body and with anencephaly,
in which a baby is missing parts of the brain and skull, the study
found.
Both Paxil and Prozac were linked to a heart defect.
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The study's authors noted that the risks appeared to be small. For
example, in women who took paroxetine early in pregnancy, the risk
for anencephaly rose from 2 cases per 10,000 to 7 per 10 000.
The analysis was only able to show links between the drugs and birth
defects, but could not prove that the drugs caused the deformities.
The authors called the findings about Zoloft "reassuring" because
the drug was used by some 40 percent of the women in the study who
said they had used an antidepressant in early pregnancy.
(Editing by Julie Steenhuysen and Christian Plumb)
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