Juliya Gasparyan, Philip O Anderson, Tamorah Lewis, Cindy H T Yeung
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This study investigates MW, protein binding, milk-to-plasma ratios (M/P), and relative infant dose (RID) with the aim of assisting clinicians' estimation of medication safety during breastfeeding. Small-molecule drugs with well-documented M/P were selected using predefined criteria. Physicochemical properties and active transporter status were compiled from multiple databases. Analyses investigated relationships between physicochemical properties, M/P, and RID. A total of 94 drugs were included in the physicochemicalM/P analyses, 91 for the M/P-RID analysis and 91 for the protein binding-RID analysis. Our study highlights the complexities of predicting drug passage into breast milk, finding no straightforward MW cutoff for passage of small molecules. These findings challenge common assumptions and emphasize the importance of considering active transport and other physicochemical properties. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
美国儿科学会(American Academy of Pediatrics)和世界卫生组织(World Health Organization)建议在婴儿出生后的前6个月纯母乳喂养,因为这对母婴有广泛的好处。虽然90%以上的母亲开始母乳喂养,但到6个月时继续母乳喂养的比例降至35%,这通常是由于对药物安全的担忧。在缺乏可靠数据的情况下,临床医生经常面临关于哺乳期间药物使用的决定。分子量(MW)、脂溶性、蛋白质结合和药物的酸碱状态等因素通常被认为是药物进入乳液的决定因素,并被用作“经验法则”(例如,分子量75%可以作为初步指导,缓慢的母体药物清除和活性代谢物会降低其效用)。
Rules of Thumb for Estimating Drug Levels in Breast Milk: How Well Do They Work?
The American Academy of Pediatrics and the World Health Organization recommend exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months of life due to extensive benefits for the maternal-infant dyad. While over 90% of mothers initiate breastfeeding, continuation drops to 35% by 6 months, often due to concerns about medication safety. Clinicians often face decisions about medication use during lactation in the absence of robust data. Factors such as molecular weight (MW), lipid solubility, protein binding and a drug's acid-base status are routinely stated as the determinants of drug passage into milk and used as "rules of thumb" (e.g., MW <500 Da). However, these have not been rigorously examined for clinical applicability. This study investigates MW, protein binding, milk-to-plasma ratios (M/P), and relative infant dose (RID) with the aim of assisting clinicians' estimation of medication safety during breastfeeding. Small-molecule drugs with well-documented M/P were selected using predefined criteria. Physicochemical properties and active transporter status were compiled from multiple databases. Analyses investigated relationships between physicochemical properties, M/P, and RID. A total of 94 drugs were included in the physicochemicalM/P analyses, 91 for the M/P-RID analysis and 91 for the protein binding-RID analysis. Our study highlights the complexities of predicting drug passage into breast milk, finding no straightforward MW cutoff for passage of small molecules. These findings challenge common assumptions and emphasize the importance of considering active transport and other physicochemical properties. While protein binding >75% can serve as a preliminary guide, slow maternal drug clearance and active metabolites can decrease its utility.
期刊介绍:
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics (CPT) is the authoritative cross-disciplinary journal in experimental and clinical medicine devoted to publishing advances in the nature, action, efficacy, and evaluation of therapeutics. CPT welcomes original Articles in the emerging areas of translational, predictive and personalized medicine; new therapeutic modalities including gene and cell therapies; pharmacogenomics, proteomics and metabolomics; bioinformation and applied systems biology complementing areas of pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, human investigation and clinical trials, pharmacovigilence, pharmacoepidemiology, pharmacometrics, and population pharmacology.