Effects Of Fetal Antiepileptic Drug Exposure Outcomes At Age 4.5 Years

Kimford J Meador,Gus A Baker,Morris J Cohen,Rebecca L Bromley,Jill Claytonsmith,Laura A Kalayjian,Andres M Kanner,Joyce D Liporace,Page B Pennell,David W Loring,David M Labiner, J Moon, Scott Sherman, D Cantrell, Cheryl Silver,Monisha Goyal,Mike R Schoenberg,Alison M Pack, Christina Palmese, Joyce Echo,Daniel L Drane, E E Moore,Megan Denham, C M Epstein, Jennifer L Gess,Sandra L Helmers,Thomas R Henry,Gholam K Motamedi, Erin Flax,Edward B Bromfield,Katrina Boyer,Barbara A Dworetzky,Andrew J Cole, Lucila Halperin, Sara Shaveljessop, Gregory L Barkley, Barbara Moir,Cynthia L Harden, Tara Tamnyyoung, G Lee,Patricia Penovich, Donna Minter,Layne Moore, Kathryn Murdock, Kathryn Wilcox, Michael N Nelson,William E Rosenfeld, Michelle Meyer,G E Mawer,Usha Kini,Roy C Martin,Michael D Privitera,Jennifer Bellman,David M Ficker, Lyle E Baade,Kore Liow,Alison Booth, Miranda Casswell,Claire Barrie,Eugene Ramsay, Patricia Arena, Christianne N Heck, Sonia Padilla,John Miller, Gail Rosenbaum,Alan J Wilensky,Tawnya Constantino, J S Smith,Naghme Adab, Gisela Velingwarnke,Maria Sam, Cormac A Odonovan,Cecile Naylor, Shelli Nobles, Cesar Santos,Gregory L Holmes,Maurice L Druzin,Martha J Morrell,Lorene M Nelson,Richard H Finnell, M S Yerby,Khosrow Adeli,Peter A Wells,Nancy Browning, Temperance Blalock, Todd Crawford, Linda Hendrickson, Bernadette Jolles,Meghan Kunchai, Hayley Loblein, Yinka Ogunsola, Steve Russell,Jamie Winestone,Mark Wolff, Phyllis Zaia, Thad Zajdowicz

NEUROLOGY(2012)

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摘要
Objective: To examine outcomes at age 4.5 years and compare to earlier ages in children with fetal antiepileptic drug (AED) exposure.Methods: The NEAD Study is an ongoing prospective observational multicenter study, which enrolled pregnant women with epilepsy on AED monotherapy (1999-2004) to determine if differential long-term neurodevelopmental effects exist across 4 commonly used AEDs (carbamazepine, lamotrigine, phenytoin, or valproate). The primary outcome is IQ at 6 years of age. Planned analyses were conducted using Bayley Scales of Infant Development (BSID at age 2) and Differential Ability Scale (IQ at ages 3 and 4.5).Results: Multivariate intent-to-treat (n = 310) and completer (n = 209) analyses of age 4.5 IQ revealed significant effects for AED group. IQ for children exposed to valproate was lower than each other AED. Adjusted means (95% confidence intervals) were carbamazepine 106 (102-109), lamotrigine 106 (102-109), phenytoin 105 (102-109), valproate 96 (91-100). IQ was negatively associated with valproate dose, but not other AEDs. Maternal IQ correlated with child IQ for children exposed to the other AEDs, but not valproate. Age 4.5 IQ correlated with age 2 BSID and age 3 IQ. Frequency of marked intellectual impairment diminished with age except for valproate (10% with IQ < 70 at 4.5 years). Verbal abilities were impaired for all 4 AED groups compared to nonverbal skills.Conclusions: Adverse cognitive effects of fetal valproate exposure persist to 4.5 years and are related to performances at earlier ages. Verbal abilities may be impaired by commonly used AEDs. Additional research is needed. Neurology (R) 2012;78:1207-1214
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