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Depression Screening Needed Repeatedly in Peripartum Period to Detect Delayed Onset and Fluctuating Symptoms

Key findings

  • In a study of 824 pregnant women who were assessed for depression from the first trimester to eight weeks postpartum, most (81.5%) had no or few symptoms
  • Persistent symptoms of peripartum depression (PPD) were documented in only 1.1% of women
  • Symptom fluctuation was common—in more than two-thirds of women, PPD resolved between the first and third trimesters, and half of women who had PPD in the third trimester no longer reported symptoms eight weeks postpartum
  • Depression assessments should be done repeatedly as a routine part of obstetrics care

In the most recent revision of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSV-5), the term postpartum depression was changed to peripartum depression (PPD), recognizing that maternal depression may begin during pregnancy. An estimated 10% to 15% of women are affected by PPD each year, and rates of PPD are probably underreported.

Researcher Sharon Dekel, PhD, whose lab in the Department of Psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital focuses on women's mental health following childbirth, recently conducted the first study to capture the course of PPD from early pregnancy to the early postpartum period. Dr. Dekel and colleagues report in the Journal of Psychiatric Research that PPD symptom fluctuations and delayed-onset PPD are common.

Study Participants and Assessments

The researchers analyzed 824 women who were part of the Kuopio Birth Cohort study of all pregnant women who are expected to give birth in Kuopio University Hospital in Finland. Their average age was 30, close to half (47%) were primiparas and most (94%) delivered at term. 87% had vaginal deliveries. 8% of the women reported a personal history of a mental health disorder.

Maternity clinic nurses evaluated women with the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) at three time points:

  • T1: Any time between 6 and 12 weeks of gestation (first trimester)
  • T2: Any time between 28 and 43 weeks of gestation (third trimester)
  • T3: At eight weeks postpartum

The EPDS has a total possible score of 0 to 30. Women with probable PPD, defined in this study as EPDS >9, were referred to a maternity clinic physician, then to a psychiatric outpatient clinic if needed.

Prevalence and Trajectories of PPD

The prevalence of PPD was:

  • T1: 40 patients (5%)
  • T2: 83 patients (10%), including 74 patients (9%) who had not had EPDS >9 at T1
  • T3: 102 patients (12%), including 57 patients (7%) who had not had EPDS >9 at T1 or T2

Symptom fluctuation was common: in more than two-thirds of women, PPD resolved between the first and third trimesters, and about half of women who had PPD in the third trimester no longer reported symptoms eight weeks postpartum.

The researchers identified four trajectories of PPD:

  • Chronic (symptoms persisted across pregnancy and the early postpartum period): 1.1% of patients
  • Delayed-onset PPD (symptoms emerged and persisted): 10.2%
  • Recovered (symptoms emerged but improved): 7.2%
  • Resilient (no or few symptoms): 81.5%

Predictors of the Trajectories

The researchers found differences between PPD trajectories in terms of maternal health and childbirth-related factors:

  • Chronic: more fetuses, more delivery complications, more incidents of low birthweight and higher rates of mental health disorders in the family compared with the other trajectories
  • Delayed-onset: more history of pregnancy complications and higher rates of maternal mental health disorders compared with the resilient trajectory
  • Recovered: more delivery complications and more incidents of low birthweight compared with the other trajectories

The Need for Repeated Assessment

The researchers conclude that drastic fluctuations in PPD symptom levels can occur over time. They call for attention to mental health during routine obstetrics care, including repeated assessment of a woman's depression level throughout pregnancy. If PPD is detected, symptom changes should be closely monitored, which will benefit both the woman and child.

81.5%
of women had no or few symptoms of PPD

1.1%
of women showed persistent symptoms of PPD

4
trajectories of PPD identified: Chronic, Delayed-onset, Recovered, Resilient

Learn more about the Dekel Lab

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