Should You Taper SSRIs Before Delivery? What the Data on PNAS Actually Says

PERINATAL PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY

Should You Taper SSRIs Before Delivery? What the Data on PNAS Actually Says

A practical, evidence-based approach to managing SSRI use near delivery—without overestimating neonatal risk.

Quick Take:

Tapering SSRIs before delivery does not clearly reduce neonatal risk for Poor Neonatal Adaptation Syndrome (PNAS)—but may increase maternal relapse.

A familiar clinical scenario: A pregnant patient on an SSRI approaches the third trimester—and the question comes up:
“Should we taper the medication before delivery to protect the baby?”

This decision is often driven by concern about Poor Neonatal Adaptation Syndrome (PNAS).

But here’s the problem:
the instinct to taper is not strongly supported by evidence—and may create more harm than benefit.

💡Clinical Pearl:

Don’t taper SSRIs before delivery just to “protect” the baby.

PNAS is typically mild and self-limited.
Postpartum relapse is not.

👉 Notify the neonatal team instead.

In Practice (What Should You Actually Do?)

  • Continue the effective SSRI in most cases
  • Avoid routine third-trimester taper
  • Notify the pediatric/neonatal team prior to delivery
  • Use shared decision-making—not fear-based decisions

See how this decision is handled step-by-step in the SSRI chapter:

Our academy’s first chapter on SSRIs is available as a free preview:

What is PNAS? (And How Serious Is It?)

Evidence Level:

Common—but transient and typically mild

Clinical Features:

  • Irritability
  • Jitteriness
  • Weak cry
  • Respiratory distress
  • Feeding difficulties

Most cases:

  • Resolve within 2–4 weeks
  • Require supportive care only

Severe outcomes:

  • Rare (~1 in 300 term infants)
  • May include seizures, dehydration, or need for intubation
  • No neonatal deaths have been attributed to SSRI exposure

Not All SSRIs Are Equal

Emerging data suggests medication-specific differences:

  • Escitalopram and fluoxetine → higher risk of delayed neonatal adaptation
  • Dose-dependent relationship observed (Cornet et al., 2024; n=280,090)

Why Fluoxetine Stands Out

  • Long half-life
  • Active metabolite (norfluoxetine)
  • Half-life: 7–15 days

This leads to:

  • Prolonged neonatal serotonin exposure
  • Reduced clearance due to immature neonatal hepatic metabolism

The Tapering Question: Does It Help?

This is where most clinicians get stuck.

What the Evidence Shows:

  • Small case series (n=38): ↓ NICU admissions with tapering
  • Larger analyses (including a Journal of the American Medical Association review):
    No clear evidence that tapering improves neonatal outcomes
  • American Academy of Family Physicians guidance:
    Discontinuation in 3rd trimester does NOT improve outcomes

The Risk You Might Be Underestimating

Tapering is not a neutral intervention.

It can lead to:

  • Relapse of maternal depression
  • Increased risk of postpartum depression
  • Functional decline during a high-risk period

And unlike PNAS—
these risks are not transient.

💡Clinical Pearl — Don’t Taper to “Protect” the Baby

The reflex to taper SSRIs before delivery is understandable—but not evidence-based.

  • PNAS is usually mild, self-limited, and manageable
  • Postpartum relapse is not

A better strategy:

  • Continue the effective medication
  • Inform the pediatric/neonatal team in advance
  • Allow for appropriate monitoring after delivery

This approach:

  • Maintains maternal stability
  • Addresses neonatal risk proactively

Why This Matters in Real Practice?

This is not just a pharmacology question—it’s a risk framing problem.

If you focus only on medication exposure, you will:

  • Overestimate neonatal risk
  • Underestimate maternal relapse

The goal is not eliminating risk.
The goal is choosing the lower-risk path overall.

👉 That’s exactly what our acdemy’s new guide fixes.

Want the Full Clinical Framework?

This is just one clinical decision point.

Inside the full guide, you’ll get:

  • Antidepressants-specific risk comparisons
  • Most updated evidence tables
  • Dosing and pharmacokinetic insights
  • Patient counseling scripts
  • EMR-ready documentation templates
  • Medication selection flowcharts

Explore the Full Series:

This is part of the Pregnancy & Breastfeeding Psychopharmacology series.

👉 View all upcoming chapters here:

Pregnancy & Breastfeeding Psychopharmacology

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