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Objective: To investigate in the Australian Pregnancy Register of Antiepileptic Drugs patterns of fetal malformation associated with intrauterine exposure to particular currently available antiseizure medications taken by women with epilepsy.
Results: There was statistically significant evidence (P < 0.05) of an increased hazard of fetal malformation associated with exposure to valproate, carbamazepine, topiramate, zonisamide, and with conception after assisted fertilization, but a reduced hazard in the offspring of women who continued to smoke during pregnancy. Valproate exposure was associated with malformations in a wide range of organs and organ systems, carbamazepine and topiramate with hydronephrosis, topiramate also with hypospadias, zonisamide with spina bifida and assisted fertilization with heart and great vessel maldevelopment.
Conclusions: Prenatal valproate exposure appears to interfere with the development of many if not all, fetal tissues. It seems likely that prenatal exposure to carbamazepine and topiramate, and possibly exposure to zonisamide, but also some process related to in vitro fertilization, may more selectively affect the normal development of particular fetal tissues or organs.
Keywords: Antiseizure medication; Assisted fertilization; Smoking; Specific malformation; Teratogenesis; Valproate.
Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.