A study published Monday in the journal Pediatrics
found that low levels of chemicals in marijuana, like
tetrahydrocannabinol or THC, were measurable in several mothers' breast
milk up to six days after they said they smoked pot or ate an edible,
among other forms of use.
"Whether
this means that some level -- or any level -- of these metabolites can
negatively influence child development is unknown at this point," said
senior study author Christina Chambers, a professor of pediatrics at the
University of California, San Diego and director of clinical research for the Department of Pediatrics at UCSD and Rady Children's Hospital.
"It's
important to be able to know the answers to those questions so the
advice that pediatricians and obstetricians are giving to pregnant women
and breastfeeding women are based on
sound evidence," she said. "This is a call to action to take the next
steps to study long-term outcomes in these children."
Separate research, published last year in the medical journal JAMA,
found that the prevalence of marijuana use among a sample of 279,457
pregnant women in California climbed from 4.2% to 7.1% from 2009 through
2016.
Physicians
and scientists have been taking a closer look at the health
implications of marijuana use while breastfeeding since mothers in the
United States got greater access through legalized recreational use in
several states.
Nine states --
Alaska, California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Nevada, Oregon,
Vermont and Washington -- and the District of Columbia allow recreational sales of marijuana, as well as medical.
'The question is, does it matter?'
The
researchers analyzed concentrations of the mind-altering chemical THC
and other compounds in the breast milk of 50 women who reported using
marijuana. The women had children who ranged in age from newborns to
toddlers older than 12 months.
Between
2014 and 2017, the women provided 54 total breast milk samples, which
were analyzed at the University of California, San Diego's Mommy's Milk lab,
a human milk research biorepository.
The women also reported in
questionnaires whether they were exposed to marijuana, medications and
other substances in the 14 days before their milk samples were
collected.
After
analyzing the milk samples, the researchers found that THC was
detectable in 34, or 63%, of the 54 samples. The average concentration
of THC found in those samples was 9.47 nanograms per milliliter. The
researchers also found five, or 9%, of the 54 samples had measurable
concentrations of cannabidiol, another chemical in cannabis.
The researchers then calculated how much THC an infant would ingest from that concentration.
Taking
into consideration breastfeeding frequency, quantity of milk ingested
and other factors, the researchers estimated that a hypothetical
3-month-old, weighing 6.1 kilograms or 13 pounds, would ingest about
0.040 nanograms of THC per milliliter of milk.
"The
question is, does it matter? ... Is it possible that even low levels in
breast milk may have an effect on a child's neurodevelopment? And we
don't know the answer to that," Chambers said.
The
study had some limitations, including that the researchers relied on
the women to remember their marijuana use or exposure and then report
that use. The researchers also did not test what levels of THC or other
compounds were in the breastfed infants themselves, instead relying on
their own estimates.
However, Chambers said that more research is to come.
The
researchers are planning another study to better understand how
cannabis exposure might be associated with neurobehavioral testing
outcomes in children.
"That's a
testable hypothesis and something that we want to move forward with
trying to answer, because it's a critical question," Chambers said.
How chemicals can get into breast milk
For
now, the study "attempts to fill a large gap in our knowledge about
marijuana use and breastfeeding," said Dr. Robyn Horsager-Boehrer,
professor and chief of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Texas Southwestern's William P. Clements Jr. University Hospital in Dallas.
THC
or other components of marijuana can enter a mother's breast milk
supply because blood vessels in the breast provide access to the glands
where milk is produced, said Horsager-Boehrer, who was not involved in
the study.
That
access allows chemicals or medications in the blood to transfer into
breast milk, depending on the "size of the compound, the concentration
in the maternal bloodstream and whether the medication or chemical is
bound to fats and proteins," Horsager-Boehrer said.
"THC
is very soluble in fat, and since breast milk has a high fat content,
it isn't surprising to see these results," she said of the study.
Yet the study did not directly examine what the significance would be for an infant.
"To
look at that, we'd first have to see if levels in the milk translate
into levels in the infants' blood," said Dr. Melissa Bartick, an
assistant professor of medicine at Cambridge Health Alliance and Harvard Medical School in Massachusetts, who was not involved in the study..
"We
would have to measure any cognitive, intellectual and behavioral
effects on the children as related to blood levels, while eliminating
confounding factors such as exposure during pregnancy and the effects of
parenting while under the influence," she said. "So there is little we
can advise from this study except more research."
What recommendations say for women
The American Academy of Pediatrics published a new clinical report accompanying the study, with recommendations for breastfeeding and pregnant women who use marijuana.
The
recommendations state that marijuana should not be used during
pregnancy and that marijuana use while breastfeeding is discouraged --
but they also recommend women be informed about the lack of definitive
research on this topic and counseled about the current concerns
regarding potential adverse effects of THC on pregnancy and child
development.
This emphasis on being
informed was something that stood out to Dr. Alison Stuebe, an
associate professor of maternal-fetal medicine at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine in Chapel Hill, who was not involved in the clinical report or the study.
"Very
often, medical documents make statements that women should 'not be
allowed to breastfeed when they use marijuana.' That approach presumes
that women need to be told what to do, rather than being given
information to make informed decisions," said Stuebe, who is also a
board member of the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine.
"As
a women's health provider, I believe we should provide women with
information and advance their understanding so they can make informed
choices," she said. "I was really happy to see counseling as an emphasis
of this document."
Dr. Sheryl Ryan, a professor of pediatrics and chief of the Division of Adolescent Medicine at Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, wrote an editorial that accompanied the new study.
She
wrote that both the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American
College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommend counseling moms to
abstain from all cannabis products if they wish to breastfeed.
The new study provides support for those recommendations, she wrote.
"But
the picture is incomplete without our understanding of what is
happening at the level of those infants exposed to
cannabinoid-containing breast milk," she wrote. "Hopefully, the calls
for research to answer these important questions will not go unheeded."
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