Kramer Michael S, Kakuma Ritsuko
Departments of Pediatrics and Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health, McGill University Faculty of Medicine, Montreal, Canada.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2012 Aug 15;2012(8):CD003517. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD003517.pub2.
Although the health benefits of breastfeeding are widely acknowledged, opinions and recommendations are strongly divided on the optimal duration of exclusive breastfeeding. Since 2001, the World Health Organization has recommended exclusive breastfeeding for six months. Much of the recent debate in developed countries has centred on the micronutrient adequacy, as well as the existence and magnitude of health benefits, of this practice.
To assess the effects on child health, growth, and development, and on maternal health, of exclusive breastfeeding for six months versus exclusive breastfeeding for three to four months with mixed breastfeeding (introduction of complementary liquid or solid foods with continued breastfeeding) thereafter through six months.
We searched The Cochrane Library (2011, Issue 6), MEDLINE (1 January 2007 to 14 June 2011), EMBASE (1 January 2007 to 14 June 2011), CINAHL (1 January 2007 to 14 June 2011), BIOSIS (1 January 2007 to 14 June 2011), African Index Medicus (searched 15 June 2011), Index Medicus for the WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region (IMEMR) (searched 15 June 2011), LILACS (Latin American and Caribbean Health Sciences) (searched 15 June 2011). We also contacted experts in the field.The search for the first version of the review in 2000 yielded a total of 2668 unique citations. Contacts with experts in the field yielded additional published and unpublished studies. The updated literature review in December 2006 yielded 835 additional unique citations.
We selected all internally-controlled clinical trials and observational studies comparing child or maternal health outcomes with exclusive breastfeeding for six or more months versus exclusive breastfeeding for at least three to four months with continued mixed breastfeeding until at least six months. Studies were stratified according to study design (controlled trials versus observational studies), provenance (developing versus developed countries), and timing of compared feeding groups (three to seven months versus later).
We independently assessed study quality and extracted data.
We identified 23 independent studies meeting the selection criteria: 11 from developing countries (two of which were controlled trials in Honduras) and 12 from developed countries (all observational studies). Definitions of exclusive breastfeeding varied considerably across studies. Neither the trials nor the observational studies suggest that infants who continue to be exclusively breastfed for six months show deficits in weight or length gain, although larger sample sizes would be required to rule out modest differences in risk of undernutrition. In developing-country settings where newborn iron stores may be suboptimal, the evidence suggests that exclusive breastfeeding without iron supplementation through six months may compromise hematologic status. Based on the Belarusian study, six months of exclusive breastfeeding confers no benefit (versus three months of exclusive breastfeeding followed by continued partial breastfeeding through six months) on height, weight, body mass index, dental caries, cognitive ability, or behaviour at 6.5 years of age. Based on studies from Belarus, Iran, and Nigeria, however, infants who continue exclusive breastfeeding for six months or more appear to have a significantly reduced risk of gastrointestinal and (in the Iranian and Nigerian studies) respiratory infection. No significant reduction in risk of atopic eczema, asthma, or other atopic outcomes has been demonstrated in studies from Finland, Australia, and Belarus. Data from the two Honduran trials and from observational studies from Bangladesh and Senegal suggest that exclusive breastfeeding through six months is associated with delayed resumption of menses and, in the Honduran trials, more rapid postpartum weight loss in the mother.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Infants who are exclusively breastfed for six months experience less morbidity from gastrointestinal infection than those who are partially breastfed as of three or four months, and no deficits have been demonstrated in growth among infants from either developing or developed countries who are exclusively breastfed for six months or longer. Moreover, the mothers of such infants have more prolonged lactational amenorrhea. Although infants should still be managed individually so that insufficient growth or other adverse outcomes are not ignored and appropriate interventions are provided, the available evidence demonstrates no apparent risks in recommending, as a general policy, exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months of life in both developing and developed-country settings.
尽管母乳喂养对健康的益处已得到广泛认可,但关于纯母乳喂养的最佳时长,各方观点和建议却存在严重分歧。自2001年起,世界卫生组织建议纯母乳喂养六个月。近期在发达国家的诸多争论主要集中在这种做法的微量营养素充足性以及健康益处的存在与否和程度大小上。
评估六个月纯母乳喂养与三至四个月纯母乳喂养后加混合喂养(持续母乳喂养并添加补充性液体或固体食物至六个月)对儿童健康、生长发育以及母亲健康的影响。
我们检索了考克兰图书馆(2011年第6期)、MEDLINE(2007年1月1日至2011年6月14日)、EMBASE(2007年1月1日至2011年6月14日)、护理学与健康照护数据库(2007年1月1日至2011年6月14日)、生物学文摘数据库(2007年1月1日至2011年6月14日)、非洲医学索引(2011年6月15日检索)、世界卫生组织东地中海区域医学索引(IMEMR)(2011年6月15日检索)、拉丁美洲和加勒比卫生科学文献数据库(LILACS)(2011年6月15日检索)。我们还联系了该领域的专家。2000年首次检索该综述时共获得2668条独立引文。与该领域专家的联系又提供了其他已发表和未发表的研究。2006年12月更新的文献综述又获得835条独立引文。
我们选取了所有内部对照临床试验和观察性研究,这些研究比较了六个月及以上纯母乳喂养与至少三至四个月纯母乳喂养并持续混合喂养至至少六个月的儿童或母亲健康结局。研究根据研究设计(对照试验与观察性研究)、来源(发展中国家与发达国家)以及比较喂养组的时间(三至七个月与之后)进行分层。
我们独立评估研究质量并提取数据。
我们确定了23项符合入选标准的独立研究:11项来自发展中国家(其中两项是在洪都拉斯进行的对照试验),12项来自发达国家(均为观察性研究)。不同研究中纯母乳喂养的定义差异很大。试验和观察性研究均未表明持续纯母乳喂养六个月的婴儿在体重或身长增长方面存在不足,不过需要更大样本量才能排除营养不足风险方面的微小差异。在新生儿铁储备可能欠佳的发展中国家环境中,有证据表明六个月纯母乳喂养且不补充铁可能会影响血液学状态。根据白俄罗斯的研究,六个月纯母乳喂养(与三个月纯母乳喂养后持续部分母乳喂养至六个月相比)对6.5岁儿童的身高、体重、体重指数、龋齿、认知能力或行为并无益处。然而,根据白俄罗斯、伊朗和尼日利亚的研究,持续纯母乳喂养六个月及以上的婴儿胃肠道感染风险显著降低,在伊朗和尼日利亚的研究中呼吸道感染风险也显著降低。芬兰、澳大利亚和白俄罗斯的研究未显示特应性皮炎、哮喘或其他特应性结局的风险有显著降低。来自洪都拉斯的两项试验以及孟加拉国和塞内加尔的观察性研究数据表明,六个月纯母乳喂养与月经恢复延迟有关,在洪都拉斯的试验中,母亲产后体重减轻更快。
与三至四个月开始部分母乳喂养的婴儿相比,纯母乳喂养六个月的婴儿胃肠道感染发病率更低,且六个月及以上纯母乳喂养的发展中国家或发达国家婴儿在生长方面未显示出不足。此外,这些婴儿的母亲哺乳期闭经时间更长。尽管仍应针对每个婴儿进行个体化管理,以免忽视生长不足或其他不良结局并提供适当干预,但现有证据表明,在发展中国家和发达国家,作为一项普遍政策,推荐在生命的前六个月进行纯母乳喂养并无明显风险。