Journal of Attention Disorders, Ahead of Print.
ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to characterize the course of ADHD during pregnancy.MethodWomen ages 18 to 45 were followed prospectively at <20 weeks, 24 weeks, and 36 weeks pregnant. Three groups emerged: women who discontinued, maintained, or adjusted their ADHD medications. ADHD symptoms were recorded using the AISRS. Anxiety, depression, stress, and functional impairment were monitored.ResultsA total of 25 women with ADHD were eligible for analysis. No significant difference observed between three groups in AISRS scores. Significant differences found between medication discontinuers vs adjusters for both mood and family functioning (EPDS, 5.3, p < .0001; WFIRS, 3.3, p = .0309). Significant differences also found between discontinuers vs maintainers for mood and family functioning (EPDS, 4.98, p = .0009; WFIRS, 3.09, p = .0197).ConclusionThis preliminary study provides novel insight into the course of ADHD during pregnancy, underscoring mood and family functioning as critical domains that may contribute to growing use of psychostimulants during pregnancy.