Lakehead University, Department of Psychology, 955 Oliver Rd, Thunder Bay, ON, P7B 5E1 Canada.
J Clin Psychiatry. 2013 Apr;74(4):377-85. doi: 10.4088/JCP.12r07917.
Although pregnant and postpartum women are presumed to be at greater risk of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) than the general population, the evidence has been inconclusive. This meta-analysis provides an estimate of OCD prevalence in pregnant and postpartum women and synthesizes the evidence that pregnant and postpartum women are at greater risk of OCD compared to the general population.
An electronic search of Google Scholar, PsycINFO, PsychARTICLES, and PubMed was performed by using the search terms OCD, obsessive-compulsive disorder, pregnancy, postpartum, prevalence, and epidemiology. We supplemented our search with articles referenced in the obtained sources. The search was conducted until August 2012 without date restrictions.
We included English-language studies reporting OCD prevalence (diagnosed according to DSM-III-R, DSM-IV, or ICD-10 criteria) in pregnant (12 studies) or postpartum (up to 12 months; 7 studies) women using structured diagnostic interviews. We also included a sample of regionally matched control studies (10 studies) estimating 12-month prevalence in the general female population for comparison. The control studies were limited to those conducted during the same time frame as the pregnant and postpartum studies.
We extracted author name, year of publication, diagnostic measure, sample size, diagnostic criteria, country, assessment time, subject population, and the point prevalence of OCD.
Mixed- and random-effects models revealed an increase in OCD prevalence across pregnancy and the postpartum period with the lowest prevalence in the general population (mean = 1.08%) followed by pregnant (mean = 2.07%) and postpartum women (mean = 2.43%). An exploratory analysis of regionally matched risk-ratios revealed both pregnant (mean = 1.45) and postpartum (mean = 2.38) women to be at greater risk of experiencing OCD compared to the general female population, with an aggregate risk ratio of 1.79.
Pregnant and postpartum women are more likely to experience OCD compared to the general population.
尽管人们认为孕妇和产后妇女患强迫症(OCD)的风险比一般人群更高,但目前的证据尚不一致。本荟萃分析旨在评估孕妇和产后妇女中 OCD 的患病率,并综合评估与一般人群相比,孕妇和产后妇女患 OCD 的风险是否更高。
使用“OCD、强迫症、怀孕、产后、患病率、流行病学”等检索词,在 Google Scholar、PsycINFO、PsychARTICLES 和 PubMed 等电子数据库中进行了电子检索。我们还查阅了获得的文献中所引用的文章。检索时间截至 2012 年 8 月,未对检索时间进行限制。
我们纳入了使用结构访谈诊断方法,报告了孕妇(12 项研究)或产后(12 个月内;7 项研究)中 OCD 患病率(根据 DSM-III-R、DSM-IV 或 ICD-10 标准诊断)的英文研究。我们还纳入了一组区域性匹配的对照研究(10 项研究),以估计一般女性人群中 OCD 的 12 个月患病率,用于比较。对照研究仅限于与孕妇和产后研究同期进行的研究。
我们提取了作者姓名、发表年份、诊断方法、样本量、诊断标准、国家、评估时间、研究对象人群以及 OCD 的时点患病率。
混合效应和随机效应模型显示,在怀孕和产后期间 OCD 患病率呈上升趋势,一般人群的患病率最低(平均值为 1.08%),其次是孕妇(平均值为 2.07%)和产后妇女(平均值为 2.43%)。对区域性匹配的风险比进行的探索性分析显示,与一般女性人群相比,孕妇(平均值为 1.45)和产后妇女(平均值为 2.38)发生 OCD 的风险更高,总体风险比为 1.79。
与一般人群相比,孕妇和产后妇女更有可能患有 OCD。