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Letter to the EditorFull Access

Lithium Discontinuation During Pregnancy

To the Editor: The article on lithium discontinuation during pregnancy by Adele C. Viguera, M.D., et al. (1) raised perplexing questions. They reported that 52% of pregnant patients and 58% of nonpregnant patients relapse in the first 40 weeks after discontinuation. Among pregnant subjects, 64% of episodes were of depressive or mixed type. This raises the question whether some women should receive prophylactic antidepressant therapy during pregnancy after discontinuing lithium. That might reduce the number of depressive episodes but increase the number of manic episodes that occur. Perhaps consideration of the nature of the most recent episode would help prediction sufficiently to justify such prophylaxis.

Morbidity from severe congenital abnormalities associated with lithium treatment during the first trimester of pregnancy is so great that it outweighs the morbidity of bipolar relapses, especially if close psychiatric supervision provides prompt diagnosis and treatment. I would be very reluctant to prescribe lithium to women in the first trimester of pregnancy.

Reference

1. Viguera AC, Nonacs R, Cohen LS, Tondo L, Murray A, Baldessarini RJ: Risk of recurrence of bipolar disorder in pregnant and nonpregnant women after discontinuing lithium maintenance. Am J Psychiatry 2000; 157:179-184LinkGoogle Scholar