Kramer M S, Kakuma R
McGill University, Faculty of Medicine, 1020 Pine Avenue West, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H3A 1A2.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2003(4):CD000133. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD000133.
Some breastfed infants with atopic eczema benefit from elimination of cow milk, egg, or other antigens from their mother's diet. Maternal dietary antigens are also known to cross the placenta.
To assess the effects of prescribing an antigen avoidance diet during pregnancy and/or lactation on maternal and infant nutrition and on the prevention or treatment of atopic disease in the child.
We searched the Cochrane Pregnancy and Childbirth Group trials register (October 2002) and contacted researchers in the field.
All randomized or quasi-randomized comparisons of maternal dietary antigen avoidance prescribed to pregnant or lactating women. We excluded trials of multimodal interventions that included manipulation of the infant's diet other than breast milk or of nondietary aspects of the infant's environment.
We extracted data from published reports, supplemented by additional information received from the trialists we contacted.
The evidence from 4 trials involving approximately 451 participants does not suggest a protective effect of maternal dietary antigen avoidance during pregnancy on the incidence of atopic eczema during the first 12 to 18 months of life. Data on allergic rhinitis/conjunctivitis and urticaria are limited to a single trial each and are insufficient to draw meaningful inferences. Longer-term atopic outcomes have not been reported. The restricted diet during pregnancy was associated with a slightly but statistically significantly lower mean gestational weight gain, a nonsignificantly higher risk of preterm birth, and a nonsignificant reduction in mean birthweight.The evidence from 3 trials involving approximately 210 participants suggests a protective effect of maternal antigen avoidance during lactation on the incidence and severity of atopic eczema during the first 12 to 18 months, but methodologic shortcomings argue for caution in interpretation.One crossover trial involving 17 lactating mothers of infants with established atopic eczema found that maternal dietary antigen avoidance was associated with a nonsignificant reduction in eczema severity.
REVIEWER'S CONCLUSIONS: Prescription of an antigen avoidance diet to a high-risk woman during pregnancy is unlikely to reduce substantially her child's risk of atopic diseases, and such a diet may adversely affect maternal and/or fetal nutrition. Prescription of an antigen avoidance diet to a high-risk woman during lactation may reduce her child's risk of developing atopic eczema, but better trials are needed. Dietary antigen avoidance by lactating mothers of infants with atopic eczema may reduce the severity of the eczema, but larger trials are needed.
一些患有特应性皮炎的母乳喂养婴儿,通过母亲饮食中去除牛奶、鸡蛋或其他抗原而受益。母体饮食抗原也已知会穿过胎盘。
评估在孕期和/或哺乳期规定避免抗原饮食对母婴营养以及对预防或治疗儿童特应性疾病的影响。
我们检索了Cochrane妊娠与分娩组试验注册库(2002年10月),并联系了该领域的研究人员。
所有对孕妇或哺乳期妇女规定避免母体饮食抗原的随机或半随机对照试验。我们排除了多模式干预试验,这些试验包括除母乳外对婴儿饮食的控制或对婴儿环境非饮食方面的控制。
我们从已发表的报告中提取数据,并辅以从我们联系的试验者那里获得的额外信息。
4项试验涉及约451名参与者,其证据并不表明孕期母体避免饮食抗原对出生后头12至18个月内特应性皮炎的发病率有保护作用。关于过敏性鼻炎/结膜炎和荨麻疹的数据每项试验仅有一项,不足以得出有意义的推论。尚未报告长期的特应性结局。孕期受限饮食与平均孕期体重增加略有但在统计学上显著降低、早产风险非显著升高以及平均出生体重非显著降低有关。3项试验涉及约210名参与者,其证据表明哺乳期母体避免抗原对出生后头12至18个月内特应性皮炎的发病率和严重程度有保护作用,但方法学上的不足表明在解释时应谨慎。一项涉及17名患有特应性皮炎婴儿的哺乳期母亲的交叉试验发现,母体避免饮食抗原与湿疹严重程度非显著降低有关。
在孕期对高危女性规定避免抗原饮食不太可能大幅降低其孩子患特应性疾病的风险,且这种饮食可能对母体和/或胎儿营养产生不利影响。在哺乳期对高危女性规定避免抗原饮食可能会降低其孩子患特应性皮炎的风险,但需要更好的试验。患有特应性皮炎婴儿的哺乳期母亲避免饮食抗原可能会降低湿疹的严重程度,但需要更大规模的试验。