| Literature DB >> 26172878 |
Ranadip Chowdhury1, Bireshwar Sinha1, Mari Jeeva Sankar2, Sunita Taneja1, Nita Bhandari1, Nigel Rollins3, Rajiv Bahl3, Jose Martines4.
Abstract
AIM: To evaluate the effect of breastfeeding on long-term (breast carcinoma, ovarian carcinoma, osteoporosis and type 2 diabetes mellitus) and short-term (lactational amenorrhoea, postpartum depression, postpartum weight change) maternal health outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Breastfeeding; Long and Short Term; Maternal health; Meta-analysis
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26172878 PMCID: PMC4670483 DOI: 10.1111/apa.13102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Paediatr ISSN: 0803-5253 Impact factor: 2.299
Breastfeeding exposures (WHO definitions) (210)
| Exposure Category | Permitted to Receive |
|---|---|
| Exclusive breastfeeding | • Breast milk from mother or wet nurse or expressed breast milk |
| • No other liquids or solids except vitamin drops or syrups, mineral supplements, or prescribed medicines | |
| Predominant breastfeeding | • Breast milk from mother or wet nurse or expressed breast milk |
| • Water and water-based drinks | |
| • No food-based fluid with the exception of fruit juice and sugar water | |
| • Vitamin drops or syrups, mineral supplements, or prescribed medicines | |
| Partial breastfeeding | • Breast milk from mother or wet nurse or expressed breast milk |
| • Any other liquids or nonliquids, including both milk and nonmilk products | |
| Any breastfeeding | • Breast milk from mother or wet nurse or expressed breast milk |
| • Includes children exclusively, predominantly, fully and partially breastfed | |
| No breastfeeding | • Formula and/or animal's milk |
| • No breast milk |
Figure 1: Prisma Flow chart.
Risk of breast carcinoma by breastfeeding duration and by subgroup
| Number of estimates | Pooled odds ratio and 95% confidence interval | p-value | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breastfeeding category | |||||
| Ever vs. Never | 98 | 0.78 (0.74; 0.82) | <0.001 | 71.9 | |
| <6 months vs. Never | 39 | 0.93 (0.88; 0.99) | 0.05 | 59.1 | |
| 6–12 months vs. Never | 36 | 0.91 (0.87; 0.96) | <0.001 | 22.5 | |
| >12 months vs. Never | 50 | 0.74 (0.69; 0.79) | <0.001 | 62.2 | |
Summary of studies included in breast carcinoma
| Estimates | Studies | Ref. No. | Design | Country | Quality | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ever vs. Never | ||||||||
| 98 | 98 | ( | Cohort | 12 | HIC | 72 | AQ | 66 |
| Case–control | 86 | LMIC | 26 | IQ | 32 | |||
| <6 months vs. Never | ||||||||
| 39 | 39 | ( | Cohort | 7 | HIC | 33 | AQ | 32 |
| Case–control | 32 | LMIC | 6 | IQ | 7 | |||
| 6–12 months vs. Never | ||||||||
| 36 | 36 | ( | Cohort | 7 | HIC | 31 | AQ | 31 |
| Case–control | 29 | LMIC | 5 | IQ | 5 | |||
| >12 months vs. Never | ||||||||
| 50 | 50 | ( | Cohort | 8 | HIC | 43 | AQ | 41 |
| Case–control | 42 | LMIC | 7 | IQ | 9 | |||
HIC, high-income country; LIC, low-income country; AQ, adequate quality; IQ, inadequate quality.
Figure 2Effect of ever breastfeeding vs. no breastfeeding on risk of breast carcinoma.
Risk of ovarian carcinoma by breastfeeding duration and by subgroup
| Number of estimates | Pooled odds ratio and 95% confidence interval | p-value | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breastfeeding category | |||||
| Ever vs. Never | 41 | 0.70 (0.64; 0.77) | <0.001 | 70.0 | |
| <6 months vs. Never | 20 | 0.83 (0.78; 0.89) | <0.001 | 3.0 | |
| 6–12 months vs. Never | 19 | 0.72 (0.66; 0.78) | <0.001 | 22.0 | |
| >12 months vs. Never | 29 | 0.63 (0.56; 0.71) | <0.001 | 51.8 | |
Summary of studies included in ovarian carcinoma
| Estimates | Studies | Ref. No. | Design | Country | Quality | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ever vs. Never | ||||||||
| 41 | 40 | ( | Cohort | 5 | HIC | 35 | AQ | 25 |
| Case–control | 35 | LMIC | 5 | IQ | 15 | |||
| <6 months vs. Never | ||||||||
| 20 | 19 | ( | Cohort | 3 | HIC | 18 | AQ | 16 |
| Case–control | 16 | LMIC | 1 | IQ | 3 | |||
| 6–12 months vs. Never | ||||||||
| 19 | 18 | ( | Cohort | 2 | HIC | 17 | AQ | 15 |
| Case–control | 16 | LMIC | 1 | IQ | 3 | |||
| >12 months vs. Never | ||||||||
| 29 | 28 | ( | Cohort | 3 | HIC | 24 | AQ | 23 |
| Case–control | 25 | LMIC | 4 | IQ | 5 | |||
LIC, low-income country; AQ, adequate quality; IQ, inadequate quality.
Figure 3Effect on ever vs. never breastfeeding on risk of ovarian carcinoma.
Association between breastfeeding and bone mineral density
| First author name (year) | Mean ± SD: BMD highest BF group (g/cm2) | Mean ± SD: BMD lowest BF group (g/cm2) | Pooled SMD (95% CI) of BMD |
|---|---|---|---|
| Distal Radius | |||
| Chowdhury (2002) ( | 0.49 ± 0.11 | 0.61 ± 0.08 | Fixed effect −0.132 (−0.26 to −0.003) |
| Hawker (2002) ( | 0.477 ± 0.05 | 0.474 ± 0.03 | |
| Henderson (2000) ( | 0.564 ± 0.06 | 0.601 ± 0.05 | Random effect −0.490 (−1.357 to 0.376) |
| Drinkwater (1991) ( | 0.541 ± 0.07 | 0.545 ± 0.05 | |
| Femoral Neck | |||
| Henderson (2000) ( | 0.835 ± 0.11 | 0.847 ± 0.12 | Fixed effect −0.142 (−0.426 to 0.142) |
| Lenora (2009) ( | 0.603 ± 0.13 | 0.613 ± 0.12 | |
| Wiklund (2012) ( | 0.96 ± 0.11 | 0.97 ± 0.11 | |
| Drinkwater (1991) ( | 0.95 ± 0.05 | 1.01 ± 0.10 | |
BMD, bone mineral density; SD, standard deviation; SMD, standardised mean difference.
Effect of breastfeeding on probability of lactational amenorrhoea
| Breastfeeding category | No. of Estimates | Ref. no | Probability of lactational amenorrhoea RR (95% CI) | p-value (test of heterogeneity) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exclusive or Predominant BF vs. No BF | 03 | ( | 1.23 (1.07–1.41) | 0.34 |
| Exclusive or Predominant BF vs. Partial BF | 05 | ( | 1.21 (1.01–1.25) | 0.08 |
| Any BF (exclusive or predominant or partial BF) vs. No BF | 04 | ( | 1.14 (0.92–1.40) | 0.01 |
Overview of studies which examined the association between breastfeeding and postpartum weight change
| S. No. | Author Name (year) | Location | Age | Association between Breastfeeding and Weight Change | Covariates included in analyses | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Monteiro et al. 2013 (( | Brazil | <24 years – 48.2% >24 years – 51.8% | For women within 2-year postpartum period, each breastfeeding score point increases an average postpartum loss of 70 g (p = 0.002) | Sanitary condition of household | |||
| Social programs of income transfer | ||||||||
| Type of delivery | ||||||||
| Prepregnancy weight | ||||||||
| 2 | Onyango et al. 2011 (( | Brazil, Ghana, India, Norway, Oman, USA | Brazil | 28.3 (6.3) | Lactation intensity and duration explained little of the variation in weight change patterns | Maternal age | ||
| Ghana | 30.8 (3.9) | BMI at 14 days | ||||||
| India | 29.0 (3.5) | Parity | ||||||
| Norway | 30.8 (4.3) | Delivery mode | ||||||
| Oman | 27.7 (5.0) | Infant birthweight | ||||||
| USA | 31.5 (4.5) | Sex | ||||||
| 3 | Samano et al. 2013 (( | Mexico | 18.8 years | Among both adult and adolescent mothers, those who practised EBF lost more weight than those who did not practise EBF (−2.9 kg, interquartile range, −5.7 to 0.8 kg, vs −1.8 kg, interquartile range −2.8 to 2.2 kg) | Pregestational weight | |||
| Marital status | ||||||||
| Education | ||||||||
| Delivery mode | ||||||||
| Duration of Lactation | Mean Body Weight (kg) | Mean BMI (kg/m2) | ||||||
| 4 | Sarkar et al. 2005 (( | Bangladesh | 18–40 years | Nonlactating | 44.3 | 19.4 | Age Height Education | |
| <12 | 42.48 | 18.86 | ||||||
| 12–24 | 42.96 | 18.85 | ||||||
| 25–36 | 43.32 | 19.11 | ||||||
| 37–48 | 43.47 | 19.29 | ||||||
| 49–60 | 44.11 | 19.36 | ||||||
| 5 | Stube et al. 2010 (( | East Massachusetts, USA | Ghana: 30.8 (3.9) | Months of Lactation | BMI kg/m2 (95% CI) | Prepregnancy BMI | ||
| 0 | 26.1 (25.4–26.9) | Parity | ||||||
| 0–3 | 25.3 (24.6–26.0) | Family history of diabetes | ||||||
| 3–6 | 25.5 (24.9–26.2) | |||||||
| 6–12 | 25.8 (25.2–26.3) | |||||||
| >12 | 25.4 (24.8–26.0) | |||||||
| Months of Lactation | Wt. retention kg mean (95% CI) | |||||||
| 0 | 2.5 (0.6–4.3) | |||||||
| 0–3 | 0.2 (−1.6–2.0) | |||||||
| 3–6 | 0.9 (−0.8–2.6) | |||||||
| 6–12 | 1.3 (−0.1–2.8) | |||||||
| >12 | 0.4 (−1.2–1.9) | |||||||