Top Banner
Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical Center
33

Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Dec 14, 2015

Download

Documents

Naomi Crowder
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Teaching in TwentyMedications and Breast Milk

Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM

Professor of Pediatrics

Boston University School of Medicine

Boston Medical Center

Page 2: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Objectives: HANDOUT M2

• Name 7 contraindications to breastfeeding

• Describe 3 pharmacokinetic factors that influence medications passing from mom to baby via breast milk

• List 2 reliable resources for information about medications and breast milk

Page 3: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Background - Mothers

• 90% of women are prescribed a medication in first week postpartum

• Mothers worry about effect of medication on nursing infant

• Leads to: non compliance, weaning, avoidance of breastfeeding

• 50% of mothers more reluctant to take a medication while nursing than during pregnancy

Page 4: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Background – Clinicians

• Frequently err erroneously on the side of caution

• Slide credit:

M Bartick

Page 5: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Background – Clinicians

• And…

• Baby may not comply with “temporary” weaning

• Weaning, even temporarily, is traumatic

• Need to balance short term med concerns with long term breastfeeding benefits

Page 6: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Seven contraindications to breastfeeding (AAP 2005)

• Mother HIV + (in USA)• Use of illegal drugs by mother• Certain medications• Active, untreated TB in mother• Galactosemia in baby• Mother HTLV + • Herpes on breast

Page 7: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

A mother is taking the following medication or drug. She asks you, “Is it to breastfeed?” What is your advice? HANDOUT M1

• Cocaine• Methadone• Glass of wine• Heparin• Phenytoin (Dilantin)• Lithium• Magnesium sulfate• TMP-SMZ (Bactrim)• Tetracycline

Page 8: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

How to decide if a medication or drug is ok?

• Pharmacokinetic factors

• Factors which govern drug transfer across membranes into breast milk as well as the metabolism of the drug in mother and infant

Page 9: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Pharmacokinetic factors

1. Passive diffusion

2. Molecular weight

3. Protein binding

4. Lipid solubility

5. Half life

6. Oral bioavailability

Page 10: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Passive diffusion

• Drugs move in and out of breast milk

• High to low• With time direction

may shift• Example: alcohol

Page 11: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Molecular weight

• High molecular weight limits movement into breast milk

• MW >500 daltons does not enter breast milk

Page 12: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Molecular weight: examples

• Insulin: MW > 6,000 daltons

• Heparin: MW 40,000 daltons

• Ethanol: MW 200

Page 13: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Protein binding

• Medications circulate in maternal circulation bound or unbound to albumin

• Only unbound drug gets into maternal milk

• Definition of good protein binding = > 90%

Page 14: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Protein binding

High protein binding• Propranolol 90% L2• Diazepam 99% L3

Low protein binding• Lithium 0% L3

Page 15: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Lipid solubility

• Drugs that are very lipid soluble penetrate into breast milk in higher concentration

• Drugs that are active in the CNS are drugs with high lipid solubility

Page 16: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Half life

Short half life drugs• Alcohol 24 min• Keflex 50 min• Ibuprofen 120 min• General anesthesia

Long half life drugs• Prozac 216 hours

Page 17: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.
Page 18: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Oral bioavailability

• Amount of drug that is absorbed from the gut into the blood stream

Page 19: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Oral bioavailability

Drug

Maternal GI Tract

Maternal Plasma

Breast Milk

Infant GI Tract

Infant Plasma

Page 20: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Oral bioavailability

• Low bioavailability may be due to – Reduced absorption in GI tract– Poor GI stability due to acidity– High first-pass uptake by liver

Page 21: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Poor oral bioavailability

• Gentamycin – <1% oral bioavailability

• Insulin (destroyed in gut)– 0% oral bioavailability

• Heparin (destroyed in gut)

Page 22: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Summary

Drugs transfer into human milk if they:

• Attain high conc in maternal plasma

• Are small enough

• Are non-protein bound

• Are highly lipid soluble

Then once in breast milk:

• Are affected by oral bioavailability in baby’s gut

Page 23: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

In general, baby gets <1% of maternal dose of

drug

Page 24: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Resources

• BAD• Very Very Very Bad• Physician’s Desk

Reference (PDR)• Major concern is

legal risk

Page 25: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Resources

• OK• AAP Statement• Committee on Drugs.

The transfer of drugs and other chemicals in human milk. Pediatrics 2001;108(3):776-789

Page 26: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Resources

THE BEST• Medications and

Mothers’ Milk• Thomas Hale, Ph.D.• www.ibreastfeeding.com

Page 27: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Medications and Mothers’ MilkLactation Risk Category

• L1 Safest

• L2 Safer

• L3 Moderately safe

• L4 Possibly hazardous

• L5 Contraindicated

Page 28: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Resources

THE BEST• LactMed.com

Page 29: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

What’s your advice?

• Cocaine• No: Hale L5, drug of abuse

contraindicated by AAP• Methadone• Yes: Hale L3, (if HIV neg, no illegal drugs)• Alcohol (glass of wine) • Yes: Hale L3, but common sense,

moderation, peak levels

Page 30: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

What’s your advice?

• Heparin• Yes: Hale L1

– MW 30,000 daltons, oral bio 0%

• Phenytoin (Dilantin)

• Yes: Hale L2, AAP ok

• Lithium

• Used to be No: Hale L5

• Now Yes: Hale L3 with close observation

Page 31: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

What’s your advice?

• Magnesium sulfate

• Yes: Hale L1• TMP-SMZ (Bactrim)• Yes: Hale L3, AAP ok• Tetracycline

• Yes: Hale L2, AAP ok – binds to calcium in the milk (<3 weeks use)

Page 32: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

Take Home Points

• Don’t guess

• Use Medication and Mothers’ Milk (www.iBreastfeeding.com)

• Use LactMed (or toxnet)

Page 33: Teaching in Twenty Medications and Breast Milk Barbara L. Philipp, MD, FAAP, FABM Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical.

References

• Hale, Thomas. Medications and Mothers’ Milk, 14th ed. Amarillo, TX: Pharmasoft, 2010– www.ibreastfeeding.com

• LactMed on ToxNet– Massbfc.org has link to AAP document and

LactMed