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Contaminants in Human Milk: Weighing the Risks against the Benefits of Breastfeeding
By M. Nathaniel Mead
Oct 27, 2008 - 7:55:16 PM
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When
it comes to feeding the newborn, human milk is, from an evolutionary
perspective, the biological norm, the time-tested standard of care. The
health benefits to the infant of breastfeeding have been amply
documented; numerous studies strongly indicate significantly decreased
risks of infection, allergy, asthma, arthritis, diabetes, obesity,
cardiovascular disease, and various cancers in both childhood and
adulthood. Among the more fundamental disadvantages of not being
breastfed is a loss of immunologic protection afforded by maternal
colostrum, a "pre-milk" fluid secreted only during the first days after
delivery, as well as numerous other bioactive factors that help protect
the infant through the first two years of life, when the immune and
nervous systems are incompletely developed. Nevertheless, given the
tendency for persistent organic pollutants (POPs), pesticides, heavy
metals, and other contaminants to accumulate in human milk, researchers
and parents alike are asking whether the nursling's exposure to these
pollutants might reduce or even override the health benefits.
Veering Off the Evolutionary Path
Throughout primate evolution and preindustrial human history,
breastfeeding was the rule: the mother carried her baby and breastfed
on demand. According to nutritional anthropologist Daniel W. Sellen in
the 2007 edition of the
Annual Review of Nutrition,
breastfeeding beyond age 2 years was typical in 75–83% of
hunter–gatherer societies, with the average age at weaning
approximately 30 months. Moreover, copious data now support the
hypothesis that humans evolved to begin consuming foods besides
mother's milk at approximately 6 months of age (Sellen also notes
humans are the only primates that wean their infants before they can
forage for themselves). This pattern was probably the norm for 200,000
years of human evolution and some 7 million years of nonhuman primate
evolution.
A radical change occurred in the late 1800s, with
the widespread relocation of rural populations to urban areas resulting
in lifestyle and sociocultural changes that disrupted the normal
breastfeeding pattern. In a historical overview published in the
December 2003 issue of the
American Journal of Public Health,
Ohio University sociologist Jacqueline H. Wolf described how large
numbers of women in all echelons of European and U.S. society, prompted
by different socioeconomic and cultural factors, began to supplement
their own milk with cows' milk soon after giving birth. Some avoided
breastfeeding altogether, and those who did breastfeed increasingly
weaned their babies before 3 months of age.
Then, in the early 1900s, U.S. public health
officials began to report that "hand feeding" infants with
unhygienically processed cow's milk was spawning an epidemic of infant
death and disease. In Chicago, for example, nearly 1 in 5 babies died
before their first birthday, mainly from diarrhea, and for every
breastfed baby that died there were 15 deaths from hand feeding. As
part of a public health campaign to lower infant mortality, posters
were mounted throughout U.S. cities urging mothers to breastfeed.
By the late 1920s, laws in most municipalities
mandated that cow's milk be processed under sanitary conditions, and
pasteurized milk was hailed as safe for young and old alike. Despite
continued warnings by public health officials on the hazards of
artificial feeding, efforts to educate new and expecting mothers waned.
At the same time, more women began having their
babies in hospitals rather than at home. Mothers and infants
increasingly were separated as a matter of course after delivery, due
to the rising use of anesthesia during labor, among other factors.
Prolonged separation after birth can make it more difficult to
establish breastfeeding; a Japanese study published by Nakao et al. in
the January 2008
International Breastfeeding Journal
showed that women who breastfed their infants within 2 hours of birth
were more than twice as likely to still be breastfeeding at 4 months
compared with mothers who initiated breastfeeding more than 2 hours
after birth.
Over the next few decades, the increasing
availability of "milk substitutes" meant that more working-class women
could enter the workplace sooner or devote more time to personal
pursuits. "By 1971, breastfeeding had reached an all-time low in the
United States. Only 24% of mothers initiated breastfeeding—that is,
only 24% breastfed at least once before hospital discharge," wrote Wolf
in the
American Journal of Public Health. Since then, she reported, breastfeeding rates have "inexplicably receded and surged."
Today, the prevalence of initial breastfeeding among U.S. mothers is
about 71%, according to a report in the 3 August 2007
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report,
but only 11–14% of infants are exclusively breastfed (i.e., consume
nothing else, including water) in the first 6 months, as recommended by
the American Academy of Pediatrics and the World Health Organization
(WHO). Only 16% of U.S. infants are still breastfeeding at 1 year of
age; probably far fewer go on to breastfeed for the 2 years recommended
by the WHO.
Figures in the February 2005 issue of
Public Health Nutrition
point to wide variation across the few European countries for which
breastfeeding data are available. Initiation rates range from 63 to
99%, exclusive breastfeeding at 6 months ranges from 1 to 46%, and
breastfeeding at 12 months ranges from 4 to 36%, with Nordic countries
consistently showing the highest rates at each point.
Meanwhile, in many developing countries, the
length of time babies are completely breastfed remains low. For
example, in African countries about one-quarter of mothers exclusively
breastfeed for 6 months, according to WHO figures. Yet a study reported
by Edmond et al. in the March 2006 issue of
Pediatrics
found that 16% of all neonatal deaths in Ghana could be prevented if
infants were breastfed from day one, 22% if breastfeeding started
within the first hour after birth.
Maternal employment can be a major limiting
factor in terms of breastfeeding duration. A study by Joan Y. Meek in
the April 2001
Pediatric Clinics of North America
found that only 10% of full-time working mothers provided any breast
milk to their 6-month-olds, compared with almost 3 times that number of
stay-at-home mothers; this pattern was consistent across all ethnic,
educational, and age groups.
In the years since that study was published,
numerous employers have established lactation rooms and
breastfeeding-supportive workplace policies, and such efforts appear to
be paying off. In the September–October 2006 issue of
Women's Health Issues,
Ryan et al. reported that 26.1% of mothers studied who worked full-time
and 36.6% of mothers who worked part-time were still breastfeeding at 6
months. The authors also reported that breastfeeding trends since 1984
indicated a more than 200% increase in the rate of breastfeeding at 6
months after delivery among full-time working mothers. However, these
numbers still fall short of the federal Healthy People 2010 goal of 50%
of mothers breastfeeding at 6 months.
Human Milk: Its Own Immune System
One of the features unique to primate infants is slow early development
of the immune system, during which time energy and nutrients are
devoted to the growth and development of other systems such as the
central nervous and musculoskeletal systems. According to Sellen,
lactation is thought to have evolved around 200 million years ago as a
means of transferring the protective functions of fully mature immune
systems across generations; all mammals derive essential protection
from their mothers' milk.
"The mother supports the host defense of the
infant in two ways," says Lars Hanson, a clinical immunologist at
Göteborg University in Sweden. "One is via antibodies from her blood
that are actively transported over the placenta to the infant's
circulation during fetal life, and are ready for use from birth on. The
other is due to the numerous and complex defense factors provided via
the mother's milk, available directly after delivery."
The factors provided through mother's milk not
only effectively defend against many pathogens, but do so in a
noninflammatory way, says Armond Goldman, an emeritus professor of
pediatrics at The University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston. By
preventing inflammation, he adds, the integrity of the digestive and
respiratory systems is preserved to ensure normal nutrition, growth,
and functioning overall.
The noninflammatory and probiotic properties of
human milk also help ensure that the infant's intestinal tract will not
be permeable to enteric pathogens. "This latter effect on the infant's
intestinal tract enables the infant to become actively immune to
environmental pathogens, but without displaying overt signs of
infection or inflammation," says Goldman.
The composition of human milk undergoes
remarkable quantitative changes as lactation proceeds, many of which
track with changes in the developmental status of the infant. Human
milk contains a rich array of proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, fatty
acids, minerals, and vitamins, but most of its disease-fighting
potential comes from a plethora of antibodies, leukocytes, hormones,
antimicrobial peptides, cytokines, chemokines, and other bioactive
factors that may be crucial to the infant's defense against common
pathogens in the first few weeks and months of life. Indeed, says
Goldman, the effects of the immune system in human milk last for as
long as the infant is breastfeeding and possibly beyond weaning.
Among the more intriguing immune connections that
have come to light is the so-called enteromammaric link. At birth, the
newborn emerges from the sterile and protected environment of the
mother's uterus into a world teeming with microbes. The newborn's gut
and skin are "colonized" by whatever microbes he or she first comes
into contact with. Ideally, this first exposure is to the mother's own
gut flora during vaginal birth; the child has already received
antibodies to her microbes
in utero,
and the antibodies later provided via the mother's milk continue to
provide the precise protection the infant needs to fend off potential
pathogens in the mother's gut flora. "Being delivered next to the
mother's anus, the newborn is subsequently colonized by the mother's
microbial flora, but these flora are the least threatening, because
mother's milk affords protection against them," explains Goldman. "In
addition, some protection comes from her transplacentally transferred
IgG [immunoglobulin G] antibodies, which have a more proinflammatory
activity."
A surge of knowledge about the immune system that
began in the 1950s would eventually culminate in a radical reframing of
the biological role of human milk. In volume 15, issue 4–5 (1959) of
the
International Archives of Allergy and Applied Immunology,
Hanson coauthored a report describing antibodies in human milk that
were active against many enteric bacteria and viruses. Two years later,
Hanson isolated secretory immunoglobulin A (SIgA), the dominant
immunoglobulin in the human body. SIgA turns out to be critical to
maintaining mucosal immunity along the digestive and respiratory
tracts, thus helping to explain breastfeeding's protective effects
against infections and allergies.
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Recent research indicates that this
milk-mediated protection extends far beyond enteric and respiratory
infections to bacterial sepsis, meningitis, urinary tract infections,
necrotizing enterocolitis, ear infections, and allergic dermatitis. The
immunoregulatory and anti-inflammatory agents provided by human milk
may also decrease the risks of developing various diseases long after
weaning. These include certain inflammatory disorders such as asthma,
dermatitis, rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and
certain cancers, as well as obesity and other health problems. For
example, in a prospective study of 2,043 Dutch children born in
1996–1997, breastfeeding for more than 4 months was associated with a
33% lower risk of being overweight by age 8 years, as reported by
Scholtens et al. in a study published 28 August 2008 ahead of print in
Obesity. And in a meta-analysis by Owen et al. published in the November 2006 issue of the
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition,
individuals who had been breastfed had a 39% lower risk of developing
type 2 diabetes in adolescence or adulthood compared with those who had
not.
Goldman notes that some of the nutrients in
mother's milk themselves have strong immunologic properties. "Some of
the by-products of enzymatic digestion of lipids in human milk afford
protection against certain bacteria, enveloped viruses, and intestinal
parasites such as
Giardia lamblia and
Entamoeba histolytica,"
he says. "Moreover, human milk provides certain selective bacterial
growth factors that support the growth of healthy enteric flora in the
infant's intestines, further enhancing immune competence." So diverse
and integrated are these various components that Goldman regards human
milk as containing its own immune system.
The benefits of human milk for human infants are
undeniable. But what happens when the nursing infant is exposed to
contaminants in human milk? The number of such contaminants is unknown,
but the extent of their presence is rapidly growing. Given the
potential risks posed by the presence of these toxicants, is there any
evidence that the bioactive components of human milk may somehow
compensate for these milk-borne pollutants and other toxicants to which
a child is exposed?
POPs at the Tip Top of the Food Chain
Breastfed infants are considered to be at the very top of the food
chain for the simple reason that their source of nourishment is other
humans, who are already at the top of the food chain. The POPs, which
include polychlorinated dibenzo-
p-dioxins
(PCDDs), polychlorinated dibenzofurans (PCDFs), polychlorinated
biphenyls (PCBs), and certain organochlorine pesticides such as DDT,
all tend to become magnified in the food chain over time. Breastfeeding
infants are thus the final target of POPs.
In 1951 DDT became the first environmental
pollutant found in human milk. Since then, DDT and its metabolites have
been reported in essentially all human milk tested worldwide. In recent
years, additional chemicals have been detected in human milk, among
them bisphenol A, polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs),
hexachlorobenzene, and the cyclodiene pesticides, which include
dieldrin, heptachlor, and chlordane. Residues of many banned POPs
persist in women's milk.
The persistent lipophilic chemicals found in
human milk are preferentially stored in the mother's adipose tissue. To
create milk for her infant, a woman's body mobilizes lifetime fat
stores and therefore transmits a portion of her stores of environmental
contaminants to her newborn during breastfeeding. A review by certified
nurse–midwife Joanne Jorissen in the October 2007
Advances in Neonatal Care
notes that on average, the nursling receives about 50 times (per
kilogram of body weight) the daily PCB intake of adults, and breastfed
infants are predicted to have cumulative PCB exposures that are up to
18% higher than those of formula-fed infants, depending on the duration
of breastfeeding.
"During the latter half of gestation there is a
redistribution of these chemicals from maternal tissue stores to the
milk compartment and to the fetus, as lipids are mobilized for milk
production and fetal growth," says Richard Wang, a medical officer at
the National Center for Environmental Health of the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC). Thus, a woman with a higher body mass
index (BMI), which reflects adiposity, will tend to accumulate more
chemicals in her body than her leaner counterparts, even if she has the
same serum concentration of that chemical or received the same chemical
dosage.
 |
"Some of the other factors that can affect the serum concentrations
of these chemicals and that need to be considered when interpreting
these data among persons include a rapid change in body weight, such as
during or after pregnancy, a difference in metabolic clearance, and
age," says Wang. "The latter is an important consideration when dealing
with environmental chemicals with lower current emission concentrations
than in the past because this difference is likely to contribute to
increased amounts of chemicals in persons at increased age." An older
breastfeeding mothers with a high BMI, for example, would tend to pass
on larger amounts of chemicals to her infant than would a younger
mother with a normal BMI.
Yet, the literature to date supports the idea
that the benefits of breastfeeding generally outweigh the hazards posed
by infant exposure to POPs in human milk. Most of the data derive from
six human cohort studies that have examined the effects of PCBs in
human breast milk. Whereas exposures
in utero may
have significant adverse effects on infant development, these studies
have suggested that breastfeeding exposures do not. However, several of
these studies have indicated that PCBs in human milk can attenuate the
developmental benefits of breastfeeding, although not in a
statistically significant fashion after controlling for other factors
in child development such as parental influence and home environment.
"The fact that studies of child [health] outcomes
in highly polluted areas are still better for the breastfed infant . .
. would seem to indicate that certain factors in the production of
human milk and in the milk itself, immunological and other, may mediate
the potential harm of the ambient pollution," says
physician–epidemiologist Miriam Labbok, who directs the Carolina
Breastfeeding Institute at the School of Public Health of the
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. "It would appear that all
the experts remain in agreement that there is no reason for WHO to
change its breastfeeding recommendations."
According to Philip Landrigan, director of the
Center for Children's Health and the Environment at Mount Sinai School
of Medicine in New York, documented adverse effects on breastfeeding
infants—such as impairment of psychomotor development and other
neurodevelopmental outcomes—have been seen primarily in cases of
high-dose poisonings in which the mother became clinically ill. He says
very few data exist on long-term effects of such exposures or on
synergistic interactions among chemicals in human milk. "The
prospective epidemiologic studies that are needed to assess chronic
outcomes that may occur at lower levels of exposure have been
undertaken for PCBs but few other persistent chemical pollutants," says
Landrigan.
In her October 2007 review, Jorissen offered this
conclusion: "At this point, there is no evidence of a threshold among
the general population beyond which the risks of breastfeeding outweigh
the benefits, nor is there any evidence demonstrating a clinically
significant negative effect of postnatal exposure to PCBs via breast
milk. To date, the majority of studies conclude that despite
substantially higher PCB loads among breastfed infants, breastfeeding
is still preferable to formula feeding."
Wang points out that many of the environmental
chemicals commonly measured in human milk come from the mother's diet.
For example, he says, up to 90% of human exposure to the persistent and
lipid-soluble dioxin-like chemicals, including certain PCBs, PCDDs, and
PCDFs, is attributed to dietary intake. These chemicals are found at
higher concentrations in fatty foods such as red meat, dairy products,
and fish. Some of the highest levels of contaminants are seen among
women in remote northern areas, such as the Canadian Inuit, who eat a
diet rich in seal, whale, and other fatty marine species high on the
food chain. Meat eaters in general tend to harbor more POPs than people
eating predominantly vegetarian diets.
During gestation and lactation, a woman therefore
may change her diet to reduce her infant's exposure to such chemicals
during critical windows of the child's growth and development. Nursing
mothers can also reduce the level of POPs in their milk by maintaining
their weight to avoid mobilizing fat stores, says Jenny Pronczuk, a WHO
medical officer working in the area of children's health and the
environment—who adds that reducing emissions of POPs into the
environment is the long-term solution to this problem and one which
risk managers should give greater priority.
Metals in Mother's Milk
Lead, mercury, arsenic, cadmium, and other potentially toxic metals
that are dispersed throughout the environment also have bioaccumulative
features and thus are of concern to the nursing infant. The presence of
lead and mercury in human milk has been extensively studied. Both are
equally dispersed in the human food chain, and their impact on the
nursling's early development is heavily determined by the mother's diet
and nutritional status. For example, because lead is stored in the
bones, breastfeeding mothers who maintain a good calcium intake and
healthy bone metabolism during pregnancy are less likely to transfer
lead to the infant, according to a review by University of Brasília
nutrition professors José G. Dórea and Carmen M. Donangelo in the June
2006 issue of
Clinical Nutrition.
The mother's exposure to lead and mercury is more critical during fetal
development than during breastfeeding, as the fetus is more vulnerable
through placental transfer than through milk. Nonetheless,
breastfeeding-mediated exposures to lead and mercury are extremely
common. "Lead and mercury reach the nursing infant through very
different maternal pathways, and exposures can occur through either
human milk or formula milk," says Dórea. "These days, the infant's lead
burden comes primarily through mother's milk and infant formula."
In some instances, Dórea says, commercial formula
may be a more serious source of heavy metals than human milk. "Because
breastfeeding is essential to a normal, healthy infant development,
avoiding breastfeeding and using cow's milk–based formulas is not a
reasonable way to respond to the problem of environmental pollution and
human milk contamination." He adds that the risk of excessive lead
exposure for infants, whether breast- or formula-fed, is higher and the
effects longer lasting, compared with mercury exposure.
Although numerous studies have found a positive
association between breastfeeding and improved cognition, some studies
have suggested that exclusive breastfeeding beyond 8 or 9 months might
result in lower cognitive scores; harmful substances in human milk and
nutritional limitations posed by lack of supplemental feeding (e.g.,
"table food") after 6 months are two possible explanations for this
observation. In one of the most recent of these studies, conducted at
the University of Michigan Center for Human Growth and Development,
infants breastfed less than 2 months showed poor neurodevelopmental
scores, but infants breastfed exclusively beyond 8 months also showed a
decline. "If environmental contaminants are found in human milk,
children with long breastfeeding as the sole milk source might have
higher levels of toxic substances and be at greater risk for associated
developmental ill effects," authors Clark et al. state in the March
2006 issue of
Ambulatory Pediatrics.
Nevertheless, Dórea asserts that the neurodevelopmental benefits of
human milk tend to override the potential adverse effects of
neurotoxicants. "There is much evidence that breastfeeding plays a role
in attenuating and reversing exposure to neurotoxic substrates,
including lead and mercury," he says. Breastfeeding may also indirectly
affect the metabolism of mercury in exposed infants by increasing
elimination of the toxic metal." Human milk contains many
brain-protective substances, including selenium, glutathione, vitamin
E, cysteine, tryptophan, choline, taurine, S100B protein, sialic acid,
and polyunsaturated fatty acids. Dórea asserts that the nursling's
brain may be protected through the combination of these neuroprotective
substances.
One component of human milk that could account
for its ability to potentially buffer the nursling from the harmful
effects of environmental toxicants is whey protein. Human milk is 80%
whey protein, a compound that may greatly increase the body's
endogenous production of glutathione, a ubiquitous cellular antioxidant
with many important roles in detoxification and immunity. This helps
explain the common experimental finding that tumor prevention by
dietary whey protein is accompanied by increased glutathione levels in
serum and tissues as well as enhanced immunologic activity.
In addition, the α-lactalbumin in human milk (the
bulk of the whey component) has been shown to selectively induce
apoptosis in cancer cells. Researchers at Sweden's Lund University
speculate that this mechanism may help purge tumor cells from the gut
of the neonate, thereby lowering the incidence of cancer in breastfed
individuals, as reported by Svensson et al. in the 11 April 2000
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Emergency Feeding of Infants
Malnutrition among infants and young children is presently one of the
most severe global public health problems and also among the main
reasons the WHO emphatically supports breastfeeding. But when the
mother herself is severely malnourished, the nutrient content of her
milk may be compromised. "Under many trying conditions, lactation can
be robust," says Goldman. "But there are some limitations when
nutrients are limiting, and some of this depends on the type of
malnutrition. In mild-to-moderate degrees of protein–calorie
deficiency, lactation performance and human milk composition remain
satisfactory. In more severe degrees, lactation performance and human
milk composition are no longer spared." He adds that the continuing
need for extra calories, protein, and micronutrients due to lactation
places an extra burden upon the malnourished woman and may further
deplete her body nutrient stores.
Although maternal diet and nutritional status
have little influence on the macronutrient (protein, fat, carbohydrate)
content of human milk, the situation is different where micronutrients
are concerned. "The presence of vitamins and minerals in human milk is
directly influenced by a mother's own nutritional status," says James
Akre, a member of the board of the International Board of Lactation
Consultant Examiners, which sets certification standards for the
lactation consultant profession. "Micronutrient deficiencies that are
believed to be widespread among the world's women merit continued close
attention for the improvement of their own health and that of their
infants."
Goldman summarizes these and other potential risks associated with human milk in volume 54, issue 1 (2007) of
Advances in Pediatrics. Among them are a lack of certain micronutrients (zinc, iron, and vitamins K, D, and B12)
in human milk, usually due to inadequacies in the mother's diet or lack
of sun exposure in the case of vitamin D; the presence of foreign food
antigens, proinflammatory fatty acids, autoantibodies, and infectious
agents such as HIV; and T cells that may colonize immune-deficient
infants and thus, for example, may trigger graft-versus-host disease.
Certain deficiencies in micronutrients, notably vitamin B12
and vitamin D, may harm the rapidly growing infant before the effect is
seen in the adult lactating woman. In the case of vitamin B12,
neurological damage may result. With vitamin D, the risk of rickets
(deformed bones) has recently increased in many parts of the world due
to lack of sunlight exposure for the breastfeeding mother and infant
[for more information on this link, see "Benefits of Sunlight: A Bright Spot for Human Health,"
EHP 116:A160–A167 (2008)].
According to Akre, mild-to-moderate subclinical forms of malnutrition
are generally not an indication for mothers not to breastfeed their
infants. "Not breastfeeding under such circumstances may only worsen
the situation for the infant in question, who is deprived of the many
benefits of human milk, as well as for the other family members when
scarce resources are used to provide a nutritionally adequate
substitute," he says. "We have to keep in mind that adequate nutrition
is more critical in early infancy than at any other time in life
because of the infant's high nutritional requirements in relation to
body weight and the influence of proper or faulty nutrition during the
first months on future health and development. Moreover, the infant is
more sensitive to abnormal nutritional situations and less adaptable
than in later life to different types, forms, proportions, and
quantities of food." From a nutritional standpoint, he adds, it is far
easier to meet the nutritional needs of a mother than those of her
nonbreastfed infant.
Many public health officials in the past have
recommended the use of commercial formula in emergency situations such
as wars or natural disasters. Even here, however, the evidence seems to
favor continued breastfeeding as long as it is possible. Labbok cites a
study by Jakobsen et al. in the November 2003 issue of
Tropical Medicine & International Health
that used data collected during a 3-month period prior to and during
the war in Guinea-Bissau to assess the impact of breastfeeding status
on mortality in an emergency. Before the war, there was no significant
difference in mortality rates between breastfed and formula-fed
infants. During the war, however, the picture changed
radically—children who were not breastfed suffered 5–6 times the
mortality compared with those who were breastfed.
In countries where infectious diseases account
for a large portion of infant mortality, widespread use of commercial
formula has resulted in epidemics of diarrhea and respiratory disease.
In a study of 9,424 infants and their mothers in Ghana, India, and
Peru, researchers found that the risk of dying was 10 times greater in
nonbreastfed infants than in predominantly breastfed infants, and
double that of partially breastfed infants, as reported by Bahl et al.
in the June 2005
Bulletin of the World Health Organization.
More recently, a major epidemic of diarrheal disease broke out among
children under age 5 years when free formula distributed in Botswana—an
intervention meant to prevent HIV transmission through mothers'
milk—was mixed with contaminated water, increasing a child's risk of
death by 50 times.
In the September 1991 issue of
Dialogue on Diarrhoea,
nutrition specialist Ted Greiner noted that reconstitution of
commercial formula using contaminated water, incorrect water-to-formula
proportions, or nonsterilized bottles can lead to diarrhea and other
infections in the infant. Milk-based powdered formula can also be
contaminated with
Enterobacter sakazakii and
Salmonella,
prompting the CDC to recommend in 2002 that alternatives to powdered
formula be used whenever possible in neonatal intensive care units. The
U.S. Food and Drug Administration, moreover, recommends that powdered
formula be reconstituted with water at temperatures of at least 158°F
to reduce the presence of
E. sakazakii. (However, in its 5 December 2007 report
EWG's Guide to Infant Formula and Baby Bottles,
the Environmental Working Group recommends choosing powdered formula
over liquid because the packaging for the latter tends to leach more
bisphenol A, a chemical the National Toxicology Program concludes may
cause adverse brain, behavioral, or prostate gland effects in fetuses,
infants, and children.)
According to the Infant Feeding in Emergencies Core Group of the
interagency Emergency Nutrition Network, commercial formula should only
be used in special circumstances during emergencies, such as when the
mother has died or is very ill, or if the mother rejects her infant due
to rape or other trauma (temporary formula use may be all that is
necessary). "Every effort must be made to re-establish lactation for
mothers and babies in such situations," says Labbok, "and babies born
after the start of an emergency should be exclusively breastfed from
birth." The use of commercial formula as a substitute for or complement
to human milk tends to divert mothers from the practice of exclusive
breastfeeding and undermine their ability to maintain a milk supply,
because the amount of milk produced by the mother's body changes in
response to suckling by the infant.
A Net Gain
After having considered the problem of environmental contaminants in
human milk, the WHO, the U.S. Surgeon General, and the American Academy
of Pediatrics continue to recommend breastfeeding. "After three decades
of study, there is now fairly good evidence that little if any
morbidity is occurring from the more common and well-studied chemical
agents found in human milk," says Walter Rogan, a clinical investigator
in the NIEHS Epidemiology Branch. "There are very few instances in
which morbidity has been described in a nursling that was due to a
chemical pollutant in milk."
Labbok agrees. "To date, no environmental
contaminant, except in situations of acute poisoning, has been found to
cause more harm to infants than does lack of breastfeeding," she says.
"I have seen no data that would argue against breastfeeding, even in
the presence of today's levels of environmental toxicants."
Still, Rogan cautions, human milk contains no proven antidote to
contaminant exposure. "To the degree that the overall benefits from
breastfeeding overlap with the deleterious effects of the chemicals,
those benefits might appear to cancel out the harm, but this is hard to
study epidemiologically," he says.
Because of human milk's nutritional, immunologic,
anticancer, and detoxifying effects, Wang, Rogan, and other
environmental scientists encourage women to continue the practice of
breastfeeding even in the context of widespread pollution. "At the same
time," says Pronczuk, "breastfeeding mothers should be helped and
advised on how to avoid alcohol and drugs and remove themselves from
polluted environments, while also creating healthier, safer, and
cleaner environments for themselves and their children."
M. Nathaniel Mead
http://www.ehponline.org/members/2008/116-10/focus.html