According to a report released by British researchers in the
July 22 issue of the journal Neurology, pregnant women who take an epilepsy
drug called topiramate alone or associated with other epilepsy medicines may be
more predisposed to birth defects.
Topiramate, put up for sale by Johnson & Johnson under
the brand name Topamax, is a widespread anti-seizure medication taken by many
people who suffer from epilepsy. Moreover, it is also employed to cure migraine
headaches. Numerous similar drugs also augment the risk of birth defects, but until
this study, the connection between birth defects and topiramate had not been intensely
analyzed.
Lead researcher John Craig, of the Royal Group of Hospitals
in Belfast, Northern
Ireland, stated in a news release from the American Academy of Neurology that more research
was still necessary in order to authenticate the conclusions, as the study had
not been expanded.
The researchers carried out the investigations on women who
had become pregnant while using topiramate alone or in combination with other
epilepsy drugs. John Craig’s team discovered that 4.8 percent of the babies
that had been born suffered from severe birth defects. Three of the infants’
mothers were taking only topiramate, while 13 were taking topiramate in
addition to other epilepsy drugs. Four of the babies had cleft palettes or
cleft lips. The rate is 11 times higher than one would expect in the cases of
women who do not take the drug, researchers said. Furthermore, the researchers
informed that four of the male infants had genital defects. Two of these babies
were reported to have “major defects”, a rate 14 times higher than usual,
according to specialists.
The frequency of birth defects among women using topiramate
was higher than the rate of birth defects in the general population, which
usually oscillates between 1 percent and 2.5 percent. In addition to this, more
birth defects were registered among women taking topiramate along with the
epilepsy drug valproate weighed against women taking topiramate a different
epilepsy drug.
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