| Literature DB >> 22461793 |
Alla Osadchy1, Myla E Moretti, Gideon Koren.
Abstract
Background. There is a controversy within the medical community regarding the role of domperidone as a galactagogue and the drug has been removed from the US market owing to safety concerns. Objective. To perform a systematic review and meta-analysis of the available data assessing the effect of domperidone on breast milk production in women experiencing insufficient lactation. Study Selection. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) examining the effect of domperidone on breast milk production of puerperal women were eligible for inclusion. Data Analysis. Absolute and relative changes from baseline were calculated for individual studies and pooled using a random effects model. Results. Three RCTs including 78 participants met the inclusion criteria. All showed a statistically significant increase in breast milk production following treatment with domperidone. The analysis of pooled data demonstrated a statistically significant relative increase of 74.72% (95% CI = 54.57; 94.86, P < 0.00001) in daily milk production with domperidone treatment compared to placebo. No maternal or neonatal adverse events were observed in any of the trials. Conclusions. Evidence from a few small RCTs of moderate to high quality suggests that domperidone produces a greater increase in breast milk supply than placebo.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22461793 PMCID: PMC3306907 DOI: 10.1155/2012/642893
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Obstet Gynecol Int ISSN: 1687-9597
Figure 1Flow chart of selected studies.
Characteristics of trials included in analysis.
| Reference | N of participant, Intervention/placebo groups | Inclusion criteria | Domperidone dose | Domperidone duration of treatment | Outcome | Outcome assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Petraglia et al. [ | 9/8 | Premiparous mothers of term infants with insufficient lactationa 2 weeks post partum | 30 mg/day | 10 days | Daily breast milk yield, before and after treatment, mL/day | By weighing the infants before and after breastfeeding using an electronic integrating scale and summarizing the single milk yields for the day |
|
| ||||||
|
Da Silva et al. [ | 7/9 | Mothers of preterm infants with low milk productionb | 30 mg/day | 7 days | Daily breast milk volume, before and after treatment, mL/day | Mechanically expressed breast milk by using a double collecting pump |
|
| ||||||
| Campbell-Yeo et al. (2010) [ | 21/24 | Mothers of preterm infants (<31 weeks gestation) with lactation failurec ≥3 wks after delivery | 30 mg/day | 14 days | Daily breast milk volume, before and after treatment, mL/day | Mechanically expressed breast milk by using a double collecting system |
ainsufficient lactation defined as milk yields at least 30% lower than those reported as normal
blow milk production defined as not meeting the infant's daily oral feeding requirements
clactation failure defined as not of the following: a decreasing milk supply by >30% from peak volume based on maternal count or inability to meet the daily nutritional intake of the infant.
Methodological quality of RCTs included in the meta-analysis.
| Studies, year | Sequence generation | Allocation concealment | Blinding of participants and personnel | Blinding of outcome assessment | Incomplete outcome data | Selective outcome reporting | Other bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Petraglia et al. [ | Insufficient information/unclear risk of bias | Insufficient information/unclear risk of bias | Insufficient information/unclear risk of bias | Insufficient information/unclear risk of bias | Insufficient information/unclear risk of bias | Insufficient information/unclear risk of bias | No/low risk of bias |
|
| |||||||
|
Da Silva et al. [ | Yes/low risk of bias | Yes/low risk of bias | Yes/low risk of bias | Yes/low risk of bias | Insufficient information/unclear risk of bias | No/low risk of bias | No/low risk of bias |
|
| |||||||
| Campbell-Yeo et al. [ | Yes/low risk of bias | Yes/low risk of bias | Yes/low risk of bias | Yes/low risk of bias | No/low risk of bias | No/low risk of bias | No/low risk of bias |
Figure 2Percent change in milk volume with domperidone treatment.