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Infant drug exposure via breast milk

Ruud H J Verstegen, Philip O. Anderson, Shinya Ito

2020British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology78 citationsDOI

Abstract

More than half of women take medications during breastfeeding, predisposing their infants to medication exposure via breast milk. As a result, adverse drug reactions may emerge in the infant, although they are rarely reported. Disposition of maternal drugs in breast milk is described with several key parameters, which include relative infant dose (RID): infant drug intake via milk (weight- and time-adjusted) expressed as a percentage of the similarly adjusted mother's dose. Most drugs show RID values of <10%, indicating that drug concentrations in infant serum do not reach a level known to be therapeutic in adults unless drug clearance is markedly lower than the adult level on a weight basis. RID is a function of milk-to-(maternal) plasma drug concentration ratio (MP ratio) and maternal drug clearance. Therefore, MP ratio between drugs must be interpreted not by itself but with maternal drug clearance of each drug. This is why some drugs such as phenobarbital show an MP ratio of <1 but an RID as high as 50-70%, while morphine shows an MP ratio of 2 but an RID in the range of 5%. Using RID, we interpreted case reports of infant adverse outcomes, and we observed cases with relatively low infant serum concentrations of drug, consistent with low RID, as well as those with near- or above-adult therapeutic serum concentrations, with or without increased drug intake (i.e. high RID). It is important to consider both pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic factors in interpreting adverse outcomes in infants breastfed by a mother taking medications.

Topics & Concepts

DrugMedicineBreast milkBreastfeedingPharmacokineticsAdverse effectPharmacodynamicsBreast feedingInfant formulaPhenobarbitalPharmacologyPhysiologyPediatricsChemistryBiochemistryBreastfeeding Practices and InfluencesPregnancy and Medication ImpactNeonatal Health and Biochemistry
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