Transdermal oestrogen for treatment of severe postnatal depression

  • Perinatal Institute ROR
  • Salisbury NHS Foundation Trust ROR
  • Chelsea and Westminster Hospital ROR

Lancet (London, England), 347(9006), 930-933

DOI 10.1016/s0140-6736(96)91414-2 PMID 8598756

Abstract

Background

Postnatal depression can have long-term adverse consequences for the mother, for the marital relationship, and for the infant's psychological development. Such depressions can be severe and resistant to both support and counselling and to therapy with antidepressant drugs. We investigated the antidepressant efficacy of oestrogen given transdermally.

Methods

In a double-blind, placebo-controlled study, 61 women with major depression, which began within 3 months of childbirth and persisted for up to 18 months postnatally, were allocated randomly active treatment (n=34; 3 months of transdermal 17 beta-oestradiol 200 micrograms daily alone, then 3 months with added cyclical dydrogesterone 10mg daily for 12 days each month) or placebo (n=27; placebo patches and tablets according to the same regimen). The women were assessed monthly by self-ratings of depressive symptoms on the Edinburgh postnatal depression scale (EPDS) and by clinical psychiatric interview (schedule for affective disorders and schizophrenia [SADS]-change scale).

Findings

On pretreatment assessments the women in both groups were severely depressed (mean EPDS score 21.8 [SD 3.0] active group, 21.3 [2.9] placebo group; SADS scores, 66.3 [11.4] and 64.3 [10.7]). During the first month of therapy the women receiving oestrogen improved rapidly, and to a significantly greater extent than controls (mean EPDS scores 13.3 [SD 5.7] vs 16.5 [5.3]. Patients receiving placebo also improved over time but, on average, their scores did not fall below the screening threshold for major depression for at least 4 months. The estimated overall treatment effect of oestrogen on the EPDS was 4.38 points (95% Cl 1.89-6.87). None of a range of other factors (age, psychiatric, obstetric and gynaecological history, severity and duration of current episode of depression, and concurrent antidepressant medication), influenced the response to oestrogen.

Interpretation

This study has shown that transdermal oestrogen is an effective treatment for postnatal depression. Further studies are required to establish the minimum effective dose and shortest necessary duration of treatment as well as the mechanism of antidepressant action of oestrogen.

Topics

transdermal estradiol postnatal depression treatment double-blind trial, estrogen therapy postpartum depression randomized controlled trial, transdermal 17 beta-estradiol severe postpartum depression efficacy, Gregoire Studd transdermal oestrogen postnatal depression, Edinburgh postnatal depression scale estrogen treatment outcome, hormonal treatment major depression after childbirth, estrogen antidepressant mechanism postpartum depression, transdermal estradiol 200 micrograms postnatal depression placebo, dydrogesterone estradiol postpartum depression SADS EPDS scores, estrogen replacement postpartum psychiatric disorder treatment
PMID 8598756 8598756 DOI 10.1016/s0140-6736(96)91414-2 10.1016/s0140-6736(96)91414-2

Cite this article

Gregoire, A. J., Kumar, R., Everitt, B., Henderson, A. F., & Studd, J. W. (1996). Transdermal oestrogen for treatment of severe postnatal depression. *Lancet (London, England)*, *347*(9006), 930-933. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(96)91414-2

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