Marijuana is the most commonly used illegal drug among pregnant and
breastfeeding women. While some previous research suggests that
prenatal marijuana exposure may impair fetal growth and brain
development, less is known about the effects of marijuana on
breastfeeding infants.
For the current study, researchers tested 54 milk samples from
breastfeeding women who said they used marijuana. A form of THC was
found in 34 samples up to about six days after the women last
reported marijuana use, researchers report in Pediatrics.
"We have not had any data on what levels of cannabis metabolites are
present in the milk of mothers who are recreational users and how
long they might persist," said senior study author Christina
Chambers of the University of California San Diego and Rady
Children's Hospital in La Jolla, California.
"This study helps address that question," Chamber said by email.
But it leaves a lot of other questions unanswered, including how
harmful THC and other chemical byproducts of marijuana might be for
breastfeeding babies.
There's some urgency to find that answer because a growing number of
women are using marijuana while pregnant and breastfeeding, Chambers
said.
A study published last year in JAMA, for example, found the
proportion of pregnant U.S. women using marijuana rose from about 4
percent in 2009 to 7 percent by 2016.
This surge was most pronounced for younger U.S. mothers. The
proportion of pregnant women under 18 using marijuana climbed from
13 percent to almost 22 percent during the period examined in that
study, while the proportion of pregnant women 18 to 24 years old
using marijuana rose from 10 percent to 19 percent.
More women may be using cannabis while breastfeeding because they
used it prior to pregnancy, said Dr. Sheryl Ryan of Penn State
Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center in Hershey, Pennsylvania.
[to top of second column] |
"They may see no reason why they need to stop their use, in the
absence of definitive data about dangers of its use during
pregnancy," Ryan, author of an accompanying editorial, said by
email.
Marijuana use during pregnancy and breastfeeding may be rising in
part because legalization of medical marijuana has made people think
of the drug as less dangerous, Ryan said.
"There is general feeling in the population that if it is legal,
then it must be safe, which is a fallacy," Ryan added.
Doctors need to do a better job of making sure women understand the
risks of marijuana during pregnancy, and the potential for it to
reach babies through breast milk, according to recommendations from
the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) published in conjunction
with the study.
Women of reproductive age need to know that it's unclear how THC
exposure may affect them or their babies and be advised to avoid
marijuana while breastfeeding, the AAP recommends. While women may
get this guidance from their own doctors, they should also get it
from pediatricians during well-baby checkups.
"What's recommended is that women breastfeed, but abstain from using
marijuana products while breastfeeding," Ryan, also an author of the
AAP recommendations, said. "We still do not know whether the amount
of THC that an infant receives through breastmilk is safe, and in
the absence of safety data, we recommend abstaining - this is what
should be of importance for breastfeeding women."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2NnktMF, https://bit.ly/2omjKAA and https://bit.ly/2P7doAq
Pediatrics, online August 27, 2018.
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |