principles of management as for bipolar disorder in a non-pregnant woman but with various provisos (see below)
risk of relapse of treated and untreated bipolar disorder is the same during pregnancy as at other times, women who are pregnant are more likely to stop treatment and this is often unplanned and abrupt
postnatal risk of relapse is much greater for women who are not receiving treatment than at other times, and may be higher than 50%
NICE guidance is summarised below:
pregnant women with bipolar disorder who are stable on an antipsychotic
if a pregnant woman with bipolar disorder is stable on an antipsychotic and likely to relapse without medication
then maintain on antipsychotic medication, and monitor for weight gain and diabetes
women with bipolar disorder planning a pregnancy
if a woman who needs antimanic medication plans to become pregnant
then treatment of choice is a low-dose typical or atypical antipsychotic
if a woman with bipolar disorder planning a pregnancy becomes depressed after stopping prophylactic medication, psychological therapy (cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT)) should be offered in preference to an antidepressant because of the risk of switching to mania associated with antidepressants
if an antidepressant is used, it should usually be an SSRI (but not paroxetine) and the woman should be monitored closely
women with bipolar disorder who have an unplanned pregnancy
if a woman with bipolar disorder has an unplanned pregnancy and is stopping lithium as prophylactic medication, an antipsychotic should be offered
pregnant women with acute mania or depressive symptoms
acute mania
if a pregnant woman who is not taking medication develops acute mania
then a typical or an atypical antipsychotic should be considered - dose should be kept as low as possible and the woman monitored carefully
if a pregnant woman develops acute mania while taking prophylactic medication, prescribers should:
check the dose of the prophylactic agent and adherence
increase the dose if the woman is taking an antipsychotic, or consider changing to an antipsychotic if she is not
if there is no response to changes in dose or drug and the patient has severe mania, consider the use of ECT, lithium and, rarely, valproate
if there is no alternative to valproate, then consider augmenting it with antimanic medication (but not carbamazepine)
depressive symptoms
if mild depressive symptoms in pregnant women with bipolar disorder the following should be considered, in the order:
self-help approaches such as guided self-help and C-CBT (computerised CBT)
brief psychological treatments (including counselling, CBT and interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT))
if moderate to severe depressive symptoms in pregnant women with bipolar disorder the following should be considered:
psychological treatment (CBT) for moderate depression
combined medication and structured psychological treatments for severe depression.
if prescribing medication for moderate to severe depressive symptoms in a pregnant woman with bipolar disorder, quetiapine alone, or SSRIs (but not paroxetine) in combination with prophylactic medication should be preferred
this is because SSRIs are less likely to be associated with switching to mania than the tricyclic antidepressants
monitor closely for signs of switching and stop the SSRI if the woman starts to develop manic or hypomanic symptoms
care in the perinatal period
after delivery, if a woman with bipolar disorder who is not on medication is at high risk of developing an acute episode, prescribers should consider establishing or reinstating medication as soon as the woman is medically stable (once the fluid balance is established)
if a woman maintained on lithium is at high risk of a manic relapse in the immediate postnatal period
consider augmenting treatment with an antipsychotic
women with bipolar disorder who wish to breastfeed
women with bipolar disorder who are taking psychotropic medication and wish to breastfeed should be offered a prophylactic agent that can be used when breastfeeding
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