| Literature DB >> 23470841 |
Natalie Shields1, Rexford Muza, Christopher Kosky, Adrian J Williams.
Abstract
Introduction. A lack of documentation of stimulant use during pregnancy means that doctors have difficulty advising narcoleptic and hypersomnolent patients. Objectives. To investigate the use of stimulant therapy in narcoleptic and hypersomnolent patients during pregnancy. Method. A search of clinic letters at a tertiary sleep clinic identified women who became pregnant whilst receiving stimulant therapy between 01/09/1999 and 18/11/2010. Fifteen patients were included in a telephone survey. Results. There were 20 pregnancies. The reported advice received with regards to stimulant use was variable. In 7 pregnancies, medication was stopped preconceptually: 1 had a cleft palate and an extra digit 6 had good foetal outcomes. In 8 pregnancies, medication was stopped postconceptually: 1 had autism and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder; 7 had good foetal outcomes. In 5 pregnancies, medication was continued throughout pregnancy: 2 ended in miscarriage; 1 was ectopic; 2 had good foetal outcomes. The most common symptom experienced was debilitating hypersomnolence. Conclusion. There are no standardised guidelines for use of stimulants during pregnancy. Women have significant symptoms during pregnancy for which there is an unmet clinical need. More research is needed into whether medication can be safely continued during pregnancy, and if not, when it should be discontinued. Better standardized advice should be made available.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23470841 PMCID: PMC3581134 DOI: 10.1155/2012/308952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sleep Disord ISSN: 2090-3553
Instructions for pregnant narcoleptic women [13].
| Advice for safety whilst off stimulant medication: | |
| (i) Make arrangements to have others drive for you | |
| (ii) Take showers instead of baths to reduce the risk of drowning | |
| (iii) No swimming for the time being | |
| (iv) Avoid heights or other situations where having a sleep attack or cataplectic attack could be hazardous | |
| (v) Take naps during the day to reduce the likelihood of sleep attacks | |
| Advice regarding the handling of your baby: | |
| (i) Wash the baby on a mat with a bowl of water so that should you have a sleep attack or cataplectic attack the baby will come to no harm | |
| (ii) Do not wash the baby in the bath | |
| (iii) Breastfeed in a lying position to reduce the risk of injury to the baby should you have a sleep attack or cataplectic attack | |
| (iv) Use a wheel baby carriage to transport the baby around the house to help reduce the risk |
Diagnosis, mean sleep latency test (MSLT) results, number of sleep onset REM (SOREM), stimulant therapy, dose, timing of discontinuation of stimulant, medical history, other medications, caffeine use, and smoking status of each patient.
| Diagnosis | MSLT score | SOREM | Medication | Dose | Timing of discontinuation of stimulants | Other medical conditions | Medication other than stimulant | Caffeine use | Smoking status | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | Narcolepsy | Diagnosis made prior to 2000 MSLT result not available | Dexamphetamine | 10 mg BD | 2004 1st baby: discontinued 8/40 | Nil | Nil | Caffeine not used | Smoking status not recorded | |
| B | Idiopathic hypersomnia | 4 min | 0/4 naps | Dexamphetamine | 10 mg BD | Postconceptually but not clear what gestation | Asthma | Seretide, salbutamol, aminophylline montelukast | Caffeine not used | Nonsmoker |
| C | Idiopathic hypersomnia | 2, 4 min | 1/5 naps | Modafinil | 100 mg BD | Discontinued at 12/40 | Obstructive sleep apnoea, Gestational Diabetes | CPAP, metformin | Caffeine use unknown | Nonsmoker |
| D | Narcolepsy with Cataplexy | Diagnosis made prior to 2000 and referral to this sleep centre | Mazindol | 2 mg BD | Continued throughout pregnancy | Hypertension | Fluoxetine, omeprazole, atenolol | Caffeine used | Smoking status not recorded | |
| E | Idiopathic hypersomnia | 3, 8 min | 1/5 naps | Modafinil | 400 mg OD | Stopped modafinil when fell pregnant; started methylphenidate at 17/40 | Nil | Nil | Caffeine not used | Smoking status not recorded |
| F | Hypersomnia | 11 min | 0/4 naps | Modafinil | 100 mgs OD | 4 weeks preconception | Costochondritis, asthma | Salbutamol | Caffeine used | Nonsmoker |
| H | Narcolepsy | Diagnosis make by a private neurologist | Modafinil | 200 mg BD | Discontinued 2/40 | Eczema | Nil | Caffeine used | Nonsmoker | |
| I | Narcolepsy with Cataplexy | 0, 6 min | 3/4 naps | Modafinil | 200 mg BD 20 mgs daily, respectively | Discontinued preconceptually | Previous glandular fever | Nil | Caffeine used | Smoking status not recorded |
| J | Narcolepsy with Cataplexy | 3, 6 min | 3/4 naps | Modafinil | 100 mg BD | Discontinued at 6/40 | Nil | Nil | Caffeine not used | Smoking status not recorded |
| K | Likely narcolepsy | 2, 7 min | 1/5 naps | Modafinil | 300 mg OD | Discontinued 3 weeks preconception | Nil | Nil | Caffeine use unknown | Ex-smoker |
| L | Narcolepsy with Cataplexy | 2, 3 min | 3/4 naps | Methylphenidate | 10 mgs BD | Discontinued 6 months perceptually | Nil | Nil | Caffeine used | Nonsmoker |
| M | Narcolepsy with cataplexy | 4, 9 min | 3/4 naps | Dexamphetamine | 5 mgs BD | Discontinued 7/40 | Simple solar lentigos on upper back | Nil | Caffeine used | Smoking status not recorded |
| N | Narcolepsy with cataplexy | Diagnosis made by paediatric neurologist: notes unavailable | Methylphenidate | 36 mg OD | Continued throughout pregnancy | Nil | Nil | Caffeine use unknown | Smoking status not recorded | |
| O | Narcolepsy | 1, 6 min | 3/4 naps | Modafinil and venlafaxine | 200 mgs daily | Discontinued 4 weeks preconceptually | Polycystic ovaries, eczema | nil | Caffeine not used | Nonsmoker |
| P | Narcolepsy | 0 h 7 m 0 s | 2/4 naps | Modafinil | 100 mgs BD | Discontinued 2 weeks preconceptually | Nil | nil | Caffeine use unknown | Nonsmoker |
Advice given to patients.
| Advice given | Number of women |
|---|---|
| Discontinue medication 3 months prior to conception | 3 |
| Discontinue medication once pregnant | 3 |
| Reduce medication slowly once pregnant | 2 |
| Stay on medication; baby may have withdrawal symptoms | 1 |
| No advice | 6 |
Timing of discontinuation of stimulants.
| Medication stopped before or after conception | Range of number of weeks | Number of pregnancies |
|---|---|---|
| Preconception | 2 weeks–6 months | 7 |
| Postconception | 2–12 weeks | 7 |
| Continued throughout pregnancy | 6 |
Symptoms experienced during pregnancy.
| Symptoms during pregnancy | Number of women |
|---|---|
| EDS | 14 |
| EDS during 1st trimester only | 2 |
| Symptoms abated | 1 |
Pregnancy outcome.
| Pre-conception discontinuation of medication | Post-conception discontinuation of medication | Medication continued throughout pregnancy | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7 | 7 | 6 | |||
|
| |||||
| Healthy | Unhealthy | Healthy | Unhealthy | Healthy | Unhealthy |
|
| |||||
| 6 | 1 | 6 | 1 | 3 | 3 |
|
| |||||
| 3 modafinil | 1 modafinil | 3 Dexamphetamine | 1 Dexamphetamine | 1 maxindol born 34 weeks | 2 dexamphetamine miscarriage |
| Cleft palatte & extra digit on foot | Autism & ADHD | ||||
| 1 Modafinil & Citralopram | 3 modafinil | ||||
| 1 methylphenidate | 1 dexamphetamine ectopic | ||||
| 1 Venlafaxin & modafinil | 1 modafinil (discontinued at 3 weeks) then methylphenidate started at 17 weeks | ||||
| 1 methlyphenydate | |||||