Prescribing of valproate and oral antiepileptics for women of childbearing age and during pregnancy in Germany between 2010 and 2020

Author:

Scholz Katrin1ORCID,Köster Ingrid1ORCID,Meyer Ingo1ORCID,Selke Gisbert W.2ORCID,Schubert Ingrid1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. PMV Research Group Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital Cologne, University of Cologne Cologne Germany

2. Research Area: Drug Information Systems and Analyses AOK Research Institute (WIdO) Berlin Germany

Abstract

AbstractPurposeTo examine prescriptions of valproate and oral antiepileptic drugs (OAED) in Germany irrespective of the indication in women in general and particularly in women of childbearing age (13–49 years) and during pregnancy between 2010 and 2020, that is, before, during and after the implementation of the EU risk minimization measures (RMMs).MethodsAnalysis of claims data. Study population: all women continuously insured with the AOK health insurance fund in the respective observation year (2010–2020) and the previous year. OAED were identified by ATC code N03. Period of pregnancy was calculated based on birth information in claims data. Main outcomes measures: (i) prevalent use of valproate/OAED: number of women with at least one prescription of valproate/OAED per year divided by all women of the study population (rate per 1000 women); (ii) percentage of OAED recipients with at least one valproate prescription during pregnancy (13–49 years) in the respective observation year.ResultsPrevalence rate/1000 women for valproate use decreased by −31.33% across all age groups (2010–2014: −7.48%; 2014–2018: −16.47%; 2018–2020: −11,17%) with a strong reduction in women 13–49 years between 2014 and 2018 (−28.74%). The rate for OAED across all age groups rose from 33.43/1000 women in 2010 to 41.03/1000 (+22,73%). Valproate use during pregnancy of women with OAED declined from 1.29% in 2010 to 0.59% in 2020 (−54,26%) (2010–2014: −5.14%; 2014–2018: −42.31%; 2018–2020: −16.69%).ConclusionEven if, due to the descriptive nature of the study, no causal relationship can be postulated between the RMMs and the strong decrease in valproate prescriptions, our results are compatible with the hypothesis that the measures have improved drug therapy safety.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Epidemiology

Reference15 articles.

1. The Use of Medication in Pregnancy

2. Comparative safety of anti‐epileptic drugs during pregnancy: a systematic review and network meta‐analysis of congenital malformations and prenatal outcomes;Veroniki AA;BMC Med,2017

3. CMDh agrees to strengthen warnings on the use of valproate medicines in women and girls. EMA/709243/2014 [https://www.ema.europa.eu/en/documents/referral/valproate‐related‐substances‐article‐31‐referral‐cmdh‐agrees‐strengthen‐warnings‐use‐valproate_en.pdf] accessed January 4 2023.

4. First Do No Harm–The report of the Independent Medicines and Medical Devices Safety Review.https://immdsreview.org.uk/downloads/IMMDSReview_Web.pdfaccessed January 4 2023.

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