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Hälsa & medicin 5.4 🇩🇰 🇳🇴 🇸🇪 🇹🇼 🇺🇸

Study finds no link between fathers' valproate use and child neurodevelopmental disorders

A new meta-analysis found no evidence that men taking the epilepsy drug valproate during sperm production pass on increased risk of neurodevelopmental disorders to their children. The finding could reshape regulatory guidance and inform treatment decisions for millions of men with epilepsy considering fatherhood.

Originaltitel: Risk of neurodevelopmental disorders associated with paternal use of valproate during spermatogenesis: a living meta-analysis—version 1

Abstrakt

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the association of paternal use of valproate during spermatogenesis compared with paternal use of lamotrigine or levetiracetam on offspring risk of neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs). METHODS: Eligibility criteria: observational, peer-reviewed studies reporting neurodevelopmental outcomes of children exposed to paternal monotherapy use of valproate vs lamotrigine or levetiracetam during spermatogenesis. INFORMATION SOURCES: statistic for any NDD.We present a meta-analysis of observational, peer-reviewed studies reporting neurodevelopmental outcomes of children exposed to paternal monotherapy use of valproate versus lamotrigine or levetiracetam during spermatogenesis. Given the major regulatory implications of paternal valproate safety, the recent emergence of new population-based data, and the expectation of further large studies, we designed this work as a living systematic review and meta-analysis that will be updated as new eligible evidence becomes available. RESULTS: =0.0%). CONCLUSIONS: In this living meta-analysis, we found no evidence that paternal exposure to valproate compared with lamotrigine/levetiracetam during spermatogenesis was associated with increased risk of NDDs in offspring.

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