4.2 Article

Adverse Drug Reactions in Breastfed Infants: A Cross-Sectional Study of Lactating Mothers

Journal

BREASTFEEDING MEDICINE
Volume 17, Issue 12, Pages 1011-1017

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/bfm.2022.0143

Keywords

adverse drug reactions; breastfed infant; maternal medicine; infant drug exposure; breastfeeding

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This study shows that breastfeeding-related infant adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are more common than reported. The nonspecific nature of these reactions and a lack of awareness and difficulty in identification of ADRs by mothers and clinicians may result in these ADRs being underreported.
Background: Breastfeeding-related adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are thought to be uncommon as reported cases are globally low. The nonspecific nature of these reactions and a lack of awareness and difficulty in identification of ADRs by mothers and clinicians may result in these ADRs being underreported.Aims: This study hypothesized that breastfeeding-related infant ADRs are more frequent than reported. As a first-hand account of breastfeeding mothers, this study aimed to evaluate the impact of the perceived ADRs on the continuation of breastfeeding and maternal treatment.Methods: Women currently breastfeeding or having breastfed in the last 12 months were invited to complete an online survey. The survey comprised 42 questions in 5 sections to obtain data from breastfeeding mothers, including their use of medicines during lactation, perceptions of infant adverse reactions attributable to maternal medication use and its potential impact on breastfeeding.Results: This online survey was completed by 339 women, 42% of whom reported taking at least one medication during breastfeeding. ADRs were reported in 23 infants where a possible or probable causal relationship indicated by a Naranjo score of 1-8 was established in 16 (11.3%). Antibiotics (n = 12) and opioids (n = 2), including tramadol and oxycodone were identified as the most common adverse reaction-causing drugs. The average age of infants at the time of the perceived ADR was 25.6 days (95% confidence interval; 4-85 days; median age 17.5 days).Conclusion: Suspected ADR reporting in this study was significantly greater than those reported to the regulatory body, the Australian Therapeutics Goods Administration, which shows that common breastfeeding-related infant ADRs are underreported.

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