Twin pregnancy in women with epilepsy.

2020 
OBJECTIVE: We report data from the Raoul Wallenberg Australian Register of Antiepileptic Drugs in Pregnancy (APR) to see if there are significant differences in relation to the courses and outcomes of the twin pregnancies contained in the register, as compared with the singleton ones. METHODS: The APR has been under the oversight of Melbourne institutional Human Ethics Research Committees; all women enrolled in the APR have provided written informed consent. Data from the APR were transferred to a spreadsheet and then analyzed using simple statistical techniques including logistic regression. RESULTS: The population studied comprised 44 twin and 2261 singleton pregnancies; thus, twin pregnancies accounted for 1.91% of all pregnancies studied. The women carrying twins tended to be older than the women with singleton pregnancies to a statistically significant extent, their pregnancies more often originated from assisted fertilization techniques, and their babies were more often delivered by cesarean section. There were no statistically significant differences in relation to antiepileptic drug (AED) therapy. Individual twins had statistically significantly lower mean birthweights than singleton babies and they were statistically significantly more often involved structurally malformed foetuses. In the first year of life, the twin pregnancies statistically significantly more often produced offspring that were affected by seizures in infancy. SIGNIFICANCE: The data suggest that there may be an increased hazard of fetal malformation in the offspring of twin pregnancy in women with epilepsy, but that with contemporary standards of management of epilepsy and pregnancy, there is unlikely to be an increased hazard of seizure-affected pregnancy.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    8
    References
    1
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []