| Literature DB >> 26516340 |
Moni R Saha1, Kath Ryan2, Lisa H Amir1.
Abstract
The objectives of this article are to systematically review i) the extent of medicine use in postpartum women, and ii) the impact of maternal medicine use (excluding contraceptives and galactogogues) on breastfeeding outcomes (initiation and/or duration). PubMed, Medline (Ovid), Scopus (Elsevier), Cinahl (EBSCO), PsycINFO (Ovid), Embase (Ovid) and Web of Science (ISI) databases were searched to find original studies on medicine use in women after the birth. Additional studies were identified by searching Google Scholar, Wiley Online Library, Springer Link, selected journals and from the reference list of retrieved articles. Observational studies with information about postpartum women's use of any type of medicine either for chronic or acute illnesses with or without breastfeeding information were included. The majority of relevant studies suggest that more than 50 % of postpartum women (breastfeeding or not) required at least one medicine. Due to the lack of uniform medication use reporting system and differences in study designs, settings and samples, the proportion of medicine use by postpartum women varies widely, from 34 to 100 %. Regarding the impact of postpartum women's medicine use on breastfeeding, a few studies suggest that women's use of certain medicines (e.g. antiepileptics, propylthiouracil, antibiotics) during lactation can reduce initiation and/ or duration of breastfeeding. These studies are limited by small sample size, and with one exception, all were conducted in Canada more than a decade ago. Large scale studies are required to establish the relationship between maternal medicine use and breastfeeding, considering type of illness, period of use and total duration of medicine use.Entities:
Keywords: Breastfeeding; Lactation; Maternal; Medication; Medicine; Postpartum
Year: 2015 PMID: 26516340 PMCID: PMC4625926 DOI: 10.1186/s13006-015-0053-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Breastfeed J ISSN: 1746-4358 Impact factor: 3.461
Fig. 1Steps of study selection process using a PRISMA flow diagram [30]
Extent of medicine use in women during postpartum period or lactation
| Author and publication year | Country, study type, sample, design and settings | Postpartum/lactation period | Proportion of women using ≥ 1 medicine during lactation and frequently used medicines | Macfarlane’s quality score, and limitation(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chaves et al., 2011 [ | Brazil, cohort study, | 12 months | 98 % | Quality score: Abstract: 88 %, Paper: 77 % |
| Pregnant women were recruited between June and Sept 2003. Nursing mothers were followed up after hospital discharge by telephone contact or home visits up to 12 months postpartum or until breastfeeding ceased. | Analgesics/antipyretics 24.7 % | |||
| Iron salts 13.7 % | Limitation(s): Commonly used medicines were reported as % of total number of prescriptions. ATC classification was not used. | |||
| NSAIDs 12.8 % | ||||
| (% based on total number of prescriptions) | ||||
| Stephansson et al., 2011 [ | Sweden, cohort study, | 3 months | 51 % | Quality score: Abstract: 75 %, Paper: 64 % |
| Women using prescription medicines during pregnancy and 3 months postpartum in 2007, collected from Swedish Medical Birth Register and the Prescribed Drug Register. | Sex hormones 21.91 % | |||
| Systemic antibacterials 13.77 % | Limitation(s): Actual drug intake bias as data source was register. No breastfeeding information was available | |||
| NSAIDs 7.06 % | ||||
| Engeland et al., 2008 [ | Norway, cohort study, | 3 months | 57 % | Quality score: Abstract: 75 %, Paper: 64 % |
| Women using prescription medicine during pregnancy and 3 months postpartum, collected from Medical Birth Registry of Norway and Norwegian Prescription Database of 2004–2006. | Sex hormones 26.7 % | |||
| Systemic antibacterials 16 % | Limitation(s): Actual drug intake bias as data source was register. No breastfeeding information was available | |||
| Posterior pituitary lobe hormones 8 % | ||||
| Dermatologicals 6.9 % | ||||
| Stultz et al., 2007 [ | USA, cohort study, | 12 months | 96 % | Quality score: Abstract: 50 %, Paper: 77 % |
| Women after delivery filled out a prenatal questionnaire and were followed up monthly by telephone for 12 months postpartum or until cessation of breastfeeding or until the close of the study in Jan 2007. They were also instructed to keep a diary regarding use of medicine. | Vitamins 73 % | |||
| NSAIDs 71 % | Limitation(s): Very small study. ATC classification was not used. Detail breastfeeding information was not available. The impact of medicine use on breastfeeding was not studied. | |||
| Acetaminophen 58 % | ||||
| Progestins 24 % | ||||
| Antimicrobials 22 % | ||||
| Bakker et al., 2006 [ | Netherlands, cohort study, | 3 months | 68 % | Quality score: Abstract: 88 %, Paper: 68 % |
| Pharmacy records of women giving birth between 1994 and 2003 were collected from the InterAction database which contains prescription drug information from community pharmacies. | Iron preparations 30.4 % | |||
| Systemic antibacterials 13.3 % | Limitation(s): Actual drug intake bias as data source was register. No breastfeeding information was available | |||
| Laxatives 6.9 % | ||||
| NSAIDs 5 % | ||||
| Schirm et al., 2004 [ | Netherlands, cross-sectional study, | <6 months | 66 % of 451 breastfeeding women | Quality score: Abstract: 88 %, Paper: 70 % |
| Questionnaires were handed out to women with a child < 6 months through 85 Well-Baby Clinics over a 6 week period in 2002. 549 women responded and 451 of them breastfed and 297 of them used medicine. | Vitamins 40.8 % | |||
| Oral analgesics 36.8 % | Limitation(s): ATC classification was not used . The impact of medicine use on breastfeeding was not studied statistically. | |||
| Antiinfectives 14.6 % | ||||
| Gastrointestinal drugs 6.9 % | ||||
| Lamounier et al., 2003 [ | Brazil, cross-sectional study, | Immediate postpartum period | 96 % | Quality score: Abstract: 75 %, Paper: 60 % |
| 2,173 women giving birth in four hospitals of Belo Horizonte city in Brazil between July 1998 and July 1999 were interviewed using questionnaire. Medical records were also checked. | Anti-inflammatory 77.8 % | |||
| Analgesics 75.5 % | Limitation(s): ATC classification was not used. Detail breastfeeding information was not available. The impact of medicine use on breastfeeding was not studied. | |||
| Antibiotics 17.8 % | ||||
| Jones and Brown 2003 [ | UK, cross-sectional study, | Within 5 days after delivery and after hospital discharge | 56.5 % within 5 days after delivery | Quality score: Abstract : 38 %, Paper: 85 % |
| Questionnaires were sent to postpartum women, in southern England between March and April 1995 and 820 breastfeeding women responded. | 55 % after hospital discharge | |||
| Antibiotics 14.27 % | Limitation(s): ATC classification was not used. The impact of medicine use on breastfeeding was not studied. | |||
| Analgesics 3.3 % | ||||
| Olesen et al. 1999 [ | Denmark, cohort study, | 12 weeks | 34.2 % to 34.7 % | Quality score: Abstract: 88 %; Paper: 64 % |
| Information about women’s prescription drug use during pregnancy and 12 weeks postpartum was collected from North Jutland Prescription Database from 1 Jan 1991 to 31 Dec 1996 and linked to Danish Medical Birth Register. | Penicillins 20.1 % | |||
| Opthalmologicals 15.5 % | Limitation(s): Actual drug intake bias as data source was register. No breastfeeding information was available | |||
| Dermatological corticosteroids 5.7 % | ||||
| (% based on total number of prescriptions) | ||||
| Thomas et al., 1994 [ | India, cross-sectional study, | 6 weeks | 100 % | Quality score: Abstract: 38 %, Paper: 70 % |
| Women who gave birth at a Southern Indian Hospital between June and Sept 1989, were interviewed using a questionnaire from the day of discharge to 6 weeks postpartum during their subsequent visits in hospital. Hospital charts were also reviewed. | Vitamins and minerals 100 % | |||
| Antipyretics 53.1 % | Limitation(s): ATC classification was not used. The impact of medicine use on breastfeeding was not studied. | |||
| Anti-inflammatory 49.2 % | ||||
| Antibiotics 37.8 % | ||||
| Uppal et al., 1993 [ | India, cross-sectional study, | N/A | 90 % | Quality score: Abstract: 63 %, Paper: 75 % |
| 200 women giving birth in Nehru Hospital, 200 attending the postpartum clinic at the same hospital, and 100 women living in a rural area were interviewed between Nov 1989 and May 1990. Hospital records were also checked. | For hospital, postpartum clinic and community settings- | |||
| Antibiotics: 90 %, 86 % and 13 % respectively | Limitation(s): ATC classification was not used. The impact of medicine use on breastfeeding was not studied. Very little breastfeeding information. | |||
| Analgesics: 56 %, 70 % and 37.6 % respectively | ||||
| Blomquist and Soderman, 1991[ | Sweden, cross-sectional study, | Up to 4 months | 70 % (excluding vitamins) | Quality score: Abstract: 75 %, Paper: 65 % |
| Women giving birth between 12 Jan and 8 Feb 1987 were asked to answer a questionnaire after hospital discharge. 195/229 women responded. | Vitamins 45 % | |||
| Pituitary hormones 29 % | Limitation(s): The impact of medicine use on breastfeeding was not studied. Very little breastfeeding information | |||
| Sex hormones 18 % | ||||
| Matheson et al., 1990 [ | Norway, retrospective survey, | 3–5 months | 69 % | Quality score: Abstract: 63 %, Paper: 70 % |
| Women 3–5 months after delivery responded to a postal questionnaire in 1985. | Analgesics/antipyretics 32 % | |||
| Dermatologicals 19 % | Limitation(s): ATC classification was not used. The impact of medicine use onbreastfeeding was not studied. | |||
| Antihaemorrhoidals 15 % | ||||
| Passmore et al., 1984 [ | Ireland, cross-sectional study, | Immediate postpartum period | 99 % | Quality score: Abstract: 75 %, Paper: 65 % |
| Medicine charts of women giving birth in three hospitals of Belfast between July to Sept 1982. | Analgesics 78.4 % | |||
| Antibacterials 15.5 % | Limitation(s): ATC classification was not used. Very little breastfeeding information. | |||
| Hypnotics 36 % |
Impact of maternal medicines on breastfeeding
| Author and publication year | Country, study type, sample, design and settings | Results | Quality score and limitation(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chaves et al., 2011 [ | Brazil, cohort study, | Duration of breastfeeding was longer in women who used no medicine or who used medicines compatible with breastfeeding ( | Macfarlane’s checklist: See Table |
| Other information is available in Table | Newcastle-Ottawa: 8/9 (Selection: 4*, Comparability:2*, Outcome: 2*) | ||
| Limitation(s): See Table | |||
| Lee et al., 2000 [ | Canada, cohort study, | 44 % of women receiving PTU initiated breastfeeding compared to 83 % in the two control groups (Group 1 vs Group 2, | Macfarlane’s checklist: Abstract: 88 %, Paper: 73 % |
| Women requiring propylthiouracil (PTU) during pregnancy (Jan 1990 to Sept 1997) were recruited and interviewed postpartum regarding their choice of infant feeding method. 36 women required PTU postpartum (Group 1); 30 did not (Group 2); 36 healthy women were controls (Group 3). | Newcastle-Ottawa: 8/9 (Selection: 4*, Comparability: 2*, Outcome: 2*) | ||
| Limitation(s): Study is based on selective medicine | |||
| Ito, 1999 [ | Canada, cohort study, | 69 women used medicines (Group 1) and 19 women did not start the medicine of concern (Group 2). 22 (32 %) of Group 1 women stopped breastfeeding before the infant was 6 months old while 1 (5 %) of the Group 2 women did so ( | Macfarlane’s checklist: Abstract: 88 %, Paper: 82 % |
| Breastfeeding women who received reassuring advice about compatibility of medicine from the Motherisk Teratogen Information Center in Toronto about their medicines in 1993 were followed up by interview up to cessation of breastfeeding or until the infant reached to 7 months. | Newcastle-Ottawa: 7/9 (Selection: 4*, Comparability: 1*Outcome: 2*) | ||
| Limitation(s): Small sample size | |||
| Ito et al., 1995 [ | Canada, cohort study, | 50 % of women receiving medicines started breastfeeding compared to 85 % in control group ( | Macfarlane’s checklist: Abstract: 88 %, Paper: 86 % |
| Women receiving antiepileptics during pregnancy were interviewed between April and June, 1993, by the Motherisk Teratogen Information Center in Toronto. 34 pregnant age-matched women were controls. | Newcastle-Ottawa: 7/9 (Selection: 4*, Comparability: 1*, Outcome: 2*) | ||
| Limitation(s): Study is based on selective medicine | |||
| Ito et al., 1993 [ | Canada, prospective cohort study, | 125 women were followed within 32 weeks of the initial consultation. 106 women started antibiotic therapy and 7 % of them stopped breastfeeding during therapy. | Macfarlane’s checklist: Abstract: 100 %, Paper: 64 % |
| Breastfeeding women who consulted the Motherisk Teratogen Information Center in Toronto between Jan 1990 and Jul 1991 about the compatability of antibiotics with breastfeeding after receiving antibiotic prescriptions. | Newcastle-Ottawa: 6/9 (Selection: 4*, Comparability: 1*, Outcome: 1*) | ||
| Limitation(s): Study is based on selective medicine, small sample and has attrition bias |
Proportion of women using medicines for various chronic diseases in the first three months postpartum
| Medication group | Proportion of women (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Sweden [ | Norway [ | Netherlands [ | |
| Cardiovascular drugs (C) | 3.06 | 4.9 | N/A |
| Thyroid therapy (H03) | 1.81 | 1.4 | 1.0 |
| Antiasthmatics (R03) | 1.51 | 1.3 | 2.1 |
| Antidepressants (N06A) | 1.6 | 0.7 | 2.1a |
| Drugs for diabetes (A10) | 0.4 | 0.3 | 0.4 |
| Antiepileptics (N03) | 0.3 | 0.3 | 0.3 |
aAntidepressants including antipsychotics (N05A)
Women’s concerns and behaviour towards use of medicines while breastfeeding
| Authors and year of publication | Women’s concerns and behaviour towards use of medicines while breastfeeding |
|---|---|
| Schirm et al., 2004, Netherlands [ | 297 women used medicine. 30 % of them hesitated to take a medicine while breastfeeding. Almost 10 % of 297 women (breastfeeding yes, medicine yes) stopped either breastfeeding or medicine use. 17 % of 154 women (breastfeeding yes, medicine no) indicated they would have used medicine if they were not breastfeeding. About 12 % of 78 women (breastfeeding no, medicine yes) mentioned medicine use as the reason for not breastfeeding. |
| A cross-sectional survey of postpartum women about their medicine use and breastfeeding | |
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| Lee et al., 2000, Canada [ | 60 % of 20 formula feeding women mentioned that physicians’ advice or their concern about the medicine was the primary reason for not breastfeeding. Women given advice by their physician in favor of breastfeeding were more likely to breastfeed than women not given this advice (Relative Risk: 5.48; 95 % CI: 1.28–23.40). |
| A cohort study of women requiring propylthiouracil | |
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| Ito, 1999, Canada [ | 19 women (22 %) did not start the medicine of concern while breastfeeding despite their need for medicine. |
| A cohort study of medicine use in breastfeeding women who had concern for their medicines | |
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| Ito et al., 1995, Canada [ | 50 % (17/34) of women did not initiate breastfeeding and chose to formula feed and 88 % of them mentioned medicine was the reason of formula feeding. |
| A cohort study of antiepileptics | |
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| Ito et al., 1993, Canada [ | 125 (62 %) women were followed within 32 weeks. 19 (15 %) women did not initiate the antibiotic therapy. 21 % women either did not start the required medicine or stopped breastfeeding while taking medicine. |
| A cohort study of antibiotic use and breastfeeding | |
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| Matheson et al., 1990, Norway [ | 17 % women showed more doubts about medicine use during lactation than during pregnancy. 33 % had similar risk perception about medicine use in pregnancy and lactation. |
| A survey of medicine use in postpartum women | |
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