Pregnancy and the Risk of Teratogenicity

Abstract
One in every 250 newborns is exposed to antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) in utero. Various studies have attributed a teratogenic effect to these AEDs, mainly consisting of major malformations, minor anomalies, intrauterine or postnatal growth failure, and psychomotor retardation. Prospective studies confirm the increased risk of major malformations. The absolute risk of 7-10% is about 3-5% higher than that in the general population. Barbiturates and phenytoin (PHT) are particularly associated with congenital heart malformations, facial clefts, and some other malformations. Valproate (VPA) and carbamazepine (CBZ) are associated predominantly with spina bifida aperta (1-2 and 0.5-1.0% risk, respectively) and hypospadias. Bilateral radial aplasia is a rare but specific effect of VPA. Several studies identified additional risk factors, i.e., high daily AED dosage, high maternal serum AED concentrations, low folate levels, or polytherapy [phenobarbital (PB) plus primidone (PRM) plus PHT or CBZ plus VPA plus PB with or without PHT]. The few prospective studies controlled for socioeconomic factors or that considered parental findings indicate that risk of specific cognitive defects rather than risk of overall mental retardation may be increased, that early growth retardation is followed by a catch-up growth to normal, and that ocular hypertelorism and nail hypoplasia are the only minor anomalies causally related to PHT exposure. However, no final conclusions can be made. Genetic predisposition to the teratogenic side effects of AEDs plays a role, codetermining the recurrence risk if the woman has previously given birth to a child with a major malformation. The molecular genetic basis of this predisposition is unclear.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)