Author:
Luan Min,Yang Fen,Miao Maohua,Yuan Wei,Gissler Mika,Arkema Elizabeth V.,Lu Donghao,Li Jiong,László Krisztina D.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Postpartum psychiatric disorders (PPD) are common complications of childbirth. A common explanation for their development is that the psychological, hormonal, and immune changes associated with pregnancy and parturition may trigger psychiatric symptoms postpartum. Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is characterized by abnormalities in the activity of the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis and of the immune system, but its association with PPD is unknown. We analyzed whether women with RA before childbirth have an increased risk of PPD.
Methods
We conducted a large population-based cohort study including mothers of singleton births in the Danish (1995–2015), Finnish (1997–2013), and Swedish Medical Birth Registers (2001–2013) (N = 3,516,849). We linked data from the Medical Birth Registers with data from several national socioeconomic and health registers. Exposure was defined as having a diagnosis of RA before childbirth, while the main outcome was a clinical diagnosis of psychiatric disorders 90 days postpartum. We analyzed the association between RA and PPD using Cox proportional hazard models, stratified by a personal history of psychiatric disorders.
Results
Among women without a history of psychiatric disorders, the PPD incidence rate was 32.2 in the exposed and 19.5 per 1000 person-years in the unexposed group; women with RA had a higher risk of overall PPD than their unexposed counterparts [adjusted hazard ratio (HR) = 1.52, 95% confidence intervals (CI) 1.17 to 1.98]. Similar associations were also observed for postpartum depression (HR = 1.65, 95% CI 1.09 to 2.48) and other PPD (HR = 1.59, 95% CI 1.13 to 2.24). Among women with a history of psychiatric disorders, the incidence rate of overall PPD was 339.6 in the exposed and 346.6 per 1000 person-years in the unexposed group; RA was not associated with PPD. We observed similar associations between preclinical RA (RA diagnosed after childbirth) and PPD to those corresponding to clinical RA.
Conclusions
Rheumatoid arthritis was associated with an increased PPD risk in women without, but not in those with a psychiatric history. If our findings are confirmed in future studies, new mothers with RA may benefit from increased surveillance for new-onset psychiatric disorders postpartum.
Funder
the Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research
National Natural Science Foundation of China
the Novo Nordisk Foundation
Nordic Cancer Union
Danish Council for Independent Research
Karen Elise Jensens Fond
the Innovation-oriented Science and Technology Grant from NHC Key Lab of Reproduction Regulation
the Swedish Heart and Lung Foundation
the China Scholarship Council
Karolinska Institute
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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