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The Importance of Breastfeeding: An Evidence Update

The Importance of Breastfeeding: An Evidence Update. David Meyers, MD Breastfeeding Summit Washington, DC June 11, 2009. Disclaimer. Clinician. Disclaimer. Clinician Researcher. Disclaimer. Clinician Researcher Policy advocate. Disclaimer. Clinician Researcher Policy advocate

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The Importance of Breastfeeding: An Evidence Update

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  1. The Importance of Breastfeeding: An Evidence Update David Meyers, MD Breastfeeding Summit Washington, DC June 11, 2009

  2. Disclaimer • Clinician

  3. Disclaimer • Clinician • Researcher

  4. Disclaimer • Clinician • Researcher • Policy advocate

  5. Disclaimer • Clinician • Researcher • Policy advocate • Federal staff

  6. Disclaimer • Clinician • Researcher • Policy advocate • Federal staff • Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality • Convene and translate among clinicians, researchers, and policy makers

  7. Goal • To highlight findings from the medical literature on the importance of breastfeeding for the health of women and children

  8. Goal • To highlight findings from the medical literature on the importance of breastfeeding for the health of women and children • Primary audience: Policy Makers • Not focusing on the clinical aspects of breastfeeding • Not focusing on research methods

  9. Framing • Breastfeeding is a complex, living, adaptable system • Multidimensional

  10. Framing • Breastfeeding is a complex, living, adaptable system • Multidimensional • Relational • Between a mother, child, and their environment

  11. Framing • Breastfeeding is a complex, living, adaptable system • Multidimensional • Relational • Developing

  12. Framing • Breastfeeding is a complex, living, adaptable system • Multidimensional • Relational • Developing • Breastfeeding optimizes a child’s chances of reaching its potential • But is not a magic guarantee

  13. Framing - continued • Population view versus Individual view

  14. Framing - continued • Population view versus Individual view • Number Needed to Treat • Good pain control after a sprain with NSAID = 2 • Ear Infection with antibiotics = 7 • Statin to prevent one heart attack = 69 • Number Needed to Screen • High blood pressure to prevent on MI = 275 • High cholesterol to prevent one MI = 400 • Colon cancer to prevent one death = 1300 • Breast cancer = 2400

  15. Evidence

  16. The breastfeeding literature • >600 articles in the past year • >1500 articles in the past two years • >3000 articles in the past five years

  17. Evidence of Importance • Focus on Health Outcomes • Children • Women

  18. Evidence of Importance • Focus on Health Outcomes • Children • Women • Not covering: • Economic benefits for families, health care system, or society • Social outcomes • Attachment/bonding, child emotional/social development, child abuse

  19. Systematic Evidence Review • Breastfeeding and Maternal and Infant Health Outcomes in Developed Countries • Prepared by the Tufts-New England Medical Center Evidence-Based Practice Center • Published April 2007

  20. Commercial Break • AHRQ Evidence-Based Practice Center Program • AHRQ awards 5-year contracts to institutions in the United States and Canada to review all relevant scientific literature on clinical, behavioral, and organization and financing topics to produce evidence reports and technology assessments. • These reports are used for informing and developing coverage decisions, quality measures, educational materials and tools, guidelines, and research agendas. • The EPCs also conduct research on methodology of systematic reviews.

  21. EPC Evidence Reviews • EPC reports are based on rigorous, comprehensive syntheses and analyses of the scientific literature on topics relevant to clinical, social science/behavioral, economic, and other health care organization and delivery issues. • EPC reports emphasize explicit and detailed documentation of methods, rationale, and assumptions. These scientific syntheses may include meta-analyses and cost analyses. • EPCs collaborate with external medical and research organizations so that a broad range of experts is included in the development process. • The resulting evidence reports and technology assessments are used by Federal and State agencies, private sector professional societies, health delivery systems, providers, payers, and others committed to evidence-based health care.

  22. To learn more, visit: • http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/epc/

  23. Methods • Searches through November 2005 / May 2006 • English language only • Multiple study types • All with comparison group • All studies graded for methodological quality • Over 9000 articles screened • Final report included • 29 systematic reviews/meta-analyses • Covering approximately 400 studies • 43 studies on infant health outcomes • 43 studies on maternal health outcomes

  24. Results:Short-term Infant Health Outcomes • A history of breastfeeding found to be associated with a reduction in the risk of common illnesses: • Acute otitis media • Non-specific gastroenteritis

  25. Results:Short-term Infant Health Outcomes • A history of breastfeeding found to be associated with a reduction in the risk of common illnesses: • Acute otitis media Ear infections • Non-specific gastroenteritis Vomiting and diarrhea

  26. Rough Translation • Ear Infection NNT ~ 6 • 2 million infants younger than 6 months each year • If 80% of infants breastfed, >300,000 fewer would have an ear infection before 6 months • Vomiting and diarrhea • Almost all formula fed infants experience in the first year • Fewer than half of exclusively breastfed infants experience in the first year

  27. Results:Short-term Infant Health Outcomes • A history of breastfeeding found to be associated with a reduction in the risk of serious illnesses: • Severe lower respiratory infections • Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)

  28. Results:Long-term Child Health Outcomes • A history of breastfeeding found to be associated with a reduction in the risk of common conditions: • Eczema • Obesity

  29. Results:Long-term Child Health Outcomes • A history of breastfeeding found to be associated with a reduction in the risk of serious conditions: • Type 2 diabetes • ALL and AML (childhood leukemia)

  30. Results: Premature Infants • Limited review of two potential outcomes: • Confirmed association between human milk feeding and reduced risk of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) • 5% absolute risk reduction • Unable to confirm an association between breastfeeding and long term cognitive development

  31. Other Results • Suggested association between breastfeeding and both asthma and type 1 diabetes • More evidence needed to understand potential association between breastfeeding and cardiovascular disease • Breastfeeding not found to be associated with improved cognitive development when potential cofounders controlled for

  32. Results: Maternal Health Outcomes • A history of breastfeeding found to be associated with a reduction in the risk of: • Breast cancer • With caution, breastfeeding found to be associated with a reduction in the risk of: • Ovarian cancer • Type 2 diabetes in women without gestational diabetes

  33. Hot off the presses • Note: I am no longer being systematic

  34. Hot off the presses • Schartz EB, Ray RM, Stuebe AM, et al. Duration of lactation and risk factors for maternal cardiovascular disease. Obstet Gynecol. 2009 May;113(5):974-82.

  35. Hot off the presses • Schartz EB, Ray RM, Stuebe AM, et al. Duration of lactation and risk factors for maternal cardiovascular disease. Obstet Gynecol. 2009 May;113(5):974-82. • Data from 139,681 postmenopausal women enrolled in the Women's Health Initiative • Multivariable modeling • Controlled for confounder (age, parity, race, education, income, age at menopause), lifestyle, and family history variables • Examined the effect of duration of lactation on prevalence and incidence of CVD and risk factors for cardiovascular disease

  36. Hot off the presses • Schartz EB, Ray RM, Stuebe AM, et al. Duration of lactation and risk factors for maternal cardiovascular disease. Obstet Gynecol. 2009 May;113(5):974-82. • Women who never breastfed were significantly more likely than women who breastfed >12 months to have: • High blood pressure 42.1% vs 38.6% • High cholesterol 14.8% vs 12.3% • Diabetes 5.3% vs 4.3% • CVD 9.9% vs 9.1%

  37. Back to the 2007 Evidence Review

  38. Presenter’s Opinion • EPC team was: • conservative with their methods, • conservative in the body of the report • and liberal with their conclusions in the executive summary

  39. Closer look: Pneumonia • One meta-analysis (Bachrach 2003) • 7 cohort studies • Meta-analysis quality rating: Grade A • Results: ‘exclusive’ breastfeeding for four or more months associated with a 72% reduction in hospitalizations for lower respiratory tract disease when compared to formula feeding • NNT = 26

  40. Closer Look: Obesity • 3 meta-analyses • One quality Grade A (Arnez 2004) • Two quality Grade Bs (Harder 2005, Owen 2005) • Consistent conclusion that breastfeeding associated with reduced risk of obesity in later life • Magnitude of effect reduced when cofounders adjusted for • No evidence available to allow conclusions about exclusive breastfeeding • Limited evidence that increased duration of breastfeeding associated with increased reduction in risk

  41. Closer look: SIDS • One poor quality meta-analysis • 4 additional studies identified • EPC conducted new meta-analysis • Limited to studies with autopsy confirmed SIDS, clear reporting of breastfeeding data, and cofounder controlling: 6 studies • Results: ever breastfeeding associated with a statistically significant reduction in risk of SIDS • Adjusted odds ratio: 0.64, 95% CI (0.51, 0.81)

  42. Closer look: SIDS • One poor quality meta-analysis • 4 additional studies identified • EPC conducted new meta-analysis • Limited to studies with autopsy confirmed SIDS, clear reporting of breastfeeding data, and cofounder controlling: 6 studies • Results: ever breastfeeding associated with a statistically significant reduction in risk of SIDS • Adjusted odds ratio: 0.64, 95% CI (0.51, 0.81) • Approximately 1 in 2000 children die from SIDS • Rough translation: One death from SIDS is prevented for every 5500 children breastfed

  43. Other Issues

  44. Breastfeeding and Human Milk Feeding • Challenging to separate out the importance of human milk from its delivery system • Human milk is important • Greater value from breastfeeding

  45. Importance of Exclusive Breastfeeding • Research evidence limited by variable data collection • In some areas, association only found for exclusive breastfeeding • In general, mixed feeding associated with better outcomes than formula feeding

  46. Duration • In many areas, increased duration of breastfeeding associated with increasing importance (Dose-effect relationship) • No upper limit shown

  47. Policy Implications • The value of breastfeeding is no longer debatable • The policy relevant question is how to support women and families • What can the health care system do? • What can employers do? • What can society do? • What can government do?

  48. Health Care System • 2008 US Preventive Services Task Force Recommendation • http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/uspstf/uspsbrfd.htm • Focused on role of health care system • Based on a systematic evidence review • Concluded interventions within the health care system in the prenatal, birth, and post-partum periods are effective in increasing the initiation and duration of breastfeeding • Evidence for specific interventions limited • Issues of context • Multi-dimensional interventions likely important

  49. Discussion

  50. Thanks David.Meyers@AHRQ.hhs.gov

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