Background: While medications for anxiety and depression are commonly used in the United States, it is unclear to what degree they are continued during pregnancy.Methods: We used a large administrative database to determine whether psychiatric medications are continued during pregnancy and predictors of continued medication treatment.Results: Of 2,672,656 women included in our analysis, 86,454 (3.1%) filled a pre-pregnancy prescription for an anxiolytic or antidepressant medication within 3 months of estimated conception. Of women who filled a pre-pregnancy prescription, 49.4%, 26.1%, and 20.1% filled subsequent prescriptions in the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd trimesters. Discontinuation rates ranged by pharmaceutical agent, from 16% for fluoxetine to 71% for alprazolam. White women and women over 25 were more likely to continue anxiolytic and antidepressant treatment during pregnancy.Conclusion: Because untreated and under-treated mental health conditions are linked to adverse maternal outcomes, high discontinuation rates may have important implications for maternal health.
Keywords: Mental health conditions; antidepressants during pregnancy; benzodiazepines; maternal depression; pharmacoepidemiology.