Epilepsy drug could cause birth defects
A drug used to treat epilepsy could cause more wide-ranging birth defects than first thought, research at the University of Ulster has shown.
The European-wide study has revealed that the use of valproic acid in the first trimester of pregnancy has the potential to cause problems ranging from spina bifida and cleft palate, to heart defects and limb reduction.
A total of seven types of birth defect were identified in the results published in the latest edition of the New England Journal of Medicine.
Professor Helen Dolk from the University of Ulster's Nursing Research Institute and a lead researcher on the project, said: "The first trimester is the period when the major organs are developing and the research has shown that the use of valproic acid was associated with significantly increased risks of the development of several malformations present at birth."
The researchers from Ulster, in collaboration with University of Groningen in the Netherlands and the EUROCAT network, examined data gathered from a population of nearly four million births, including 98,075 live births, stillbirths, or terminations with malformations, in14 European countries between 1995 and 2005.
Professor Dolk continued: "The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence has previously advised caution to women of child-bearing age on taking the anti-epileptic drug and the results from our research reinforces this.
"About two percent of births have major birth defects. However, with mothers who take valproic acid, the risk of birth defects can be as much as two to three times higher.
"Our study has shown that risk varies according to the specific type of malformation and identified seven different types of malformation in which the risk was increased between two and 12 times compared with no anti-epileptic drug use."
The researchers also compared the use of valproic acid with the use of other anti-epileptic drugs and found the risk was mainly related to valproic acid rather than other anti-epileptic drugs.
(Source: University of Ulster: New England Journal of Medicine: June 2010)
Related Articles:
- New gene discovery unlocks mystery to epilepsy in infants
- Minimising birth defect risk for pregnant women with epilepsy
Article Comments
Rate this article
List News by Medical Area
Current Sponsors
|
Australia’s leading source for trustworthy medical information written by health professionals. Please be aware that we do not give advice on your individual medical condition, Virtual Medical Centre © 2002 - 2012 | Privacy Policy Last updated 21 May 2012 |
||
This site complies with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information: verify here.
|
For banner advertising![]() |
Website and videos by![]() Web Design Perth |
| ^ Back to Top | ||













Comment from: LaTrenda | 10/19/2010 2:26:27 AM
I just have one question, is there an effect on males sperm that take epileptic medications such as Depakote?