Penn Center for Women's Behavioral Wellness, Department of Psychiatry, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, 3535 Market St, 3rd Floor, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2013 Jun;227(4):567-82. doi: 10.1007/s00213-013-3115-8. Epub 2013 May 17.
Women are increasingly prescribed selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) during pregnancy, with potential implications for neurodevelopment. Whether prenatal SSRI exposure has an effect on neurodevelopment and behavior in the offspring is an important area of investigation.
The aim of this paper was to review the existing preclinical and clinical literature of prenatal SSRI exposure on serotonin-related behaviors and markers in the offspring. The goal is to determine if there is a signal in the literature that could guide clinical care and/or inform research.
Preclinical studies (n = 4) showed SSRI exposure during development enhanced depression-like behavior. Half of rodent studies examining anxiety-like behavior (n = 13) noted adverse effects with SSRI exposure. A majority of studies of social behavior (n = 4) noted a decrease in sociability in SSRI exposed offspring. Human studies (n = 4) examining anxiety in the offspring showed no adverse effects of prenatal SSRI exposure. The outcome of one study suggested that children with autism were more likely to have a mother who was prescribed an SSRI during pregnancy.
Preclinical findings in rodents exposed to SSRIs during development point to an increase in depression- and anxiety-like behavior and alteration in social behaviors in the offspring, though both the methods used and the findings were not uniform. These data are not robust enough to discourage use of SSRIs during human pregnancy, particularly given the known adverse effects of maternal mental illness on pregnancy outcomes and infant neurodevelopment. Future research should focus on consistent animal models and prospective human studies with larger samples.
女性在怀孕期间越来越多地被开处选择性 5-羟色胺再摄取抑制剂(SSRIs),这可能对神经发育有影响。产前 SSRI 暴露是否会对后代的神经发育和行为产生影响,这是一个重要的研究领域。
本文旨在回顾现有关于产前 SSRI 暴露对后代与 5-羟色胺相关的行为和标志物的临床前和临床文献。目标是确定文献中是否存在可以指导临床护理和/或为研究提供信息的信号。
临床前研究(n=4)表明,发育过程中的 SSRI 暴露增强了抑郁样行为。在研究焦虑样行为的啮齿动物研究中(n=13),有一半注意到 SSRI 暴露有不良影响。大多数研究社会行为(n=4)注意到 SSRI 暴露的后代社交能力下降。研究后代焦虑的人类研究(n=4)表明,产前 SSRI 暴露对后代没有不良影响。一项研究的结果表明,患有自闭症的儿童的母亲在怀孕期间更有可能被开处 SSRI。
在发育过程中暴露于 SSRIs 的啮齿动物的临床前发现表明,后代的抑郁样和焦虑样行为增加,以及社会行为改变,尽管使用的方法和发现并不统一。这些数据还不够充分,不足以阻止在人类怀孕期间使用 SSRIs,尤其是考虑到母亲精神疾病对妊娠结局和婴儿神经发育的已知不良影响。未来的研究应集中在一致的动物模型和前瞻性的人类研究上,样本量更大。