Prescrire Int. 2013 Feb;22(135):43-4.
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor antidepressants (SSRIs) are sometimes prescribed to pregnant women. The potential consequences for the unborn child are gradually becoming clearer. In a case-control study of 298 children with autism and 1507 controls, 6.7% of mothers of autistic children had been prescribed an antidepressant during the year before delivery, compared to 3.3% of control mothers. The antidepressant was usually an SSRI. A dozen other small epidemiological studies of neurological development in children exposed to antidepressants in utero have provided mixed results. Two of these studies suggested a risk of psychomotor retardation. In practice, SSRI antidepressants should only be considered for pregnant women when non-drug measures fail and when symptoms are sufficiently serious to warrant drug therapy.
选择性5-羟色胺再摄取抑制剂类抗抑郁药(SSRI)有时会被开给孕妇。对未出生孩子的潜在影响正逐渐明晰。在一项针对298名自闭症儿童和1507名对照儿童的病例对照研究中,自闭症儿童的母亲中有6.7%在分娩前一年曾被开抗抑郁药,而对照儿童的母亲这一比例为3.3%。所开的抗抑郁药通常是SSRI。另外还有十几项关于子宫内接触抗抑郁药的儿童神经发育的小型流行病学研究,结果不一。其中两项研究表明存在精神运动发育迟缓的风险。实际上,只有在非药物措施无效且症状严重到足以进行药物治疗时,才应考虑给孕妇使用SSRI类抗抑郁药。