Anti-epilepsy drug valproate during pregnancy linked to higher rates of autism

Posted: Published on April 24th, 2013

This post was added by Dr Simmons

Pregnant women who use valproate, an anti-epilepsy drug that is also used to prevent migraines and treat bipolar disorder, may be putting their babies at increased risk of autism.

A new study published in JAMA on April 24 showed that children of mothers who used valproate during pregnancy had a five times higher risk of having a child who was eventually diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder compared with women who did not use the drug.

"This is an important risk factor and one that can be avoided or at least the risk reduced in women who don't need to take this and can take another drug," Dr. Kimford Meador, a professor of neurology at Emory University in Atlanta, said to Businessweek. Meador wrote an accompanying editorial published in the same journal issue. "This is the strongest evidence to date that there is a link between fetal exposure and childhood autism or autism spectrum disorder."

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The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now estimates that 1 in 50 school age children may have an autism spectrum disorder (ASD). ASDs are a group of developmental brain disorders that affect social, communication and behavioral development. The disorders can range in severity from people with milder symptoms -- called Asperger syndrome -- to those with autistic disorder or "classic" autism.

Researchers looked at 665,615 babies born in Denmark between 1996 and 2006. The children were followed for an average of 8.8 years. Out of the group, 5,437 were diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder, and 2,067 were diagnosed with childhood autism specifically.

The researchers found that mothers of 2,644 children took anti-epileptic drugs during pregnancy, with 508 specifically taking valproate. They determined that valproate was linked to an absolute risk of 4.42 percent for an ASD and 2.5 percent for childhood autism.

For women who had epilepsy who did not take valproate, the absolute risk of having a child with an ASD was 2.44 percent, with 1.2 percent receiving a diagnosis of childhood autism.

In January 2013, a British study of 415 children also linked autism to mothers taking valproate. Those results were published in the Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry.

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Anti-epilepsy drug valproate during pregnancy linked to higher rates of autism

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