Breastfeeding Associated With A Reduced Risk Of Relapse In Women With Multiple Sclerosis
Main Category: Multiple SclerosisAlso Included In: Neurology / Neuroscience; Pediatrics / Children's Health
Article Date: 09 Jun 2009 - 7:00 PDT
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Women with multiple sclerosis who breastfeed exclusively for at least two months appear less likely to experience a relapse within a year after their baby's birth, according to a report posted online today that will appear in the August print issue of Archives of Neurology, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
"Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic inflammatory disease of the central nervous system that predominantly affects women in their childbearing years," the authors write as background information in the article. "It is well known that women with MS have fewer relapses during pregnancy and a high risk of relapse in the postpartum period." Medications used to treat MS by modifying the immune system-including interferon beta and natalizumab-are not recommended for use during pregnancy or breastfeeding. Therefore, women with MS who give birth must choose between nursing and resuming MS treatment.
Annette Langer-Gould, M.D., Ph.D., then of Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, Calif., and now of Kaiser Permanente Southern California, Pasadena, and colleagues studied 32 pregnant women with MS and 29 pregnant women without MS who were the same age. The participants were interviewed about clinical, menstrual and breastfeeding history during each trimester and again two, four, six, nine and 12 months after they gave birth. In addition, neurological examination findings were collected from the physicians of women with MS.
More healthy women than women with MS breastfed (96 percent vs. 69 percent), and among those who did breastfeed, women with MS were more likely to begin daily formula feedings within two months after birth (30 percent compared with 18 percent). "Of the 52 percent of women with MS who did not breastfeed or began regular supplemental feedings within two months postpartum [15 women], 87 percent [13 women] had a postpartum relapse, compared with 36 percent [five women] of the women with MS who breastfed exclusively for at least two months postpartum [14 women]," the authors write. "Women with MS and healthy women who breastfed exclusively had significantly prolonged lactational amenorrhea [absence of menstruation], which was associated with a decreased risk of relapse in women with MS."
Most women with MS who did not breastfeed or supplemented with formula feedings (11 women, or 73 percent) reported that their primary reason for doing so was to take medications for MS. Eight of them (53 percent) resumed MS medications within two months after birth.
"Why breastfeeding might be beneficial in humans with an autoimmune disease like MS has not been studied," the authors write. "Studies of immunity and breastfeeding, while plentiful, are predominantly focused on breast milk content and health benefits to the infant. Little is known about maternal immunity during breastfeeding."
The results suggest that women with MS should be encouraged to breastfeed exclusively for at least the first two months after birth instead of resuming medications, the authors note. "Our findings call into question the benefit of foregoing breastfeeding to start MS therapies and should be confirmed in a larger study," they conclude.
Arch Neurol. 2009;66[8]:(doi:10.1001/archneurol.2009.132).
Source
Archives of Neurology
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MLA
14 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/153160.php>
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http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/153160.php.
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But MS Medication 'Interferon' Absolutely *is* Compatible With Breastfeeding !
posted by Emma Kwasnica on 9 Jun 2009 at 1:40 pmTo Annette Langer-Gould (study author) --
I was disappointed with a report on your study regarding breastfeeding effects on MS relapses for postpartum mothers.
The MS medication used to prevent relapses, Interferon, absolutely *is* compatible with breastfeeding, as the molecule is too large to get into the breastmilk, posing ZERO risk to the newborn baby.
If the MS mothers in your study had had accurate info at their fingertips, how much do you reckon that the 60% figure (of MS mothers who chose NOT to breastfeed) would have been reduced, ie., had the mums known that they, in fact, could have safely gone back on Interferon whilst breastfeeding their newborns ?
It's a shame the authors of this study didn't have accurate info with which to provide the MS sufferers. I am saddened to think of all the benefits of breastfeeding --which both the mothers and babies were denied-- due to misinformation about drug compatibilities and breastfeeding. For future refernce regarding any medications and their compatibility with breastfeeding, I strongly recommend you contact pediatrician and world-renowned breastfeeding expert, Dr. Jack Newman, of Toronto, Ontario (drjacknewman@sympatico.ca).
Sincerely,
-Emma Kwasnica, in Montréal
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