Dennis Cindy-Lee, Jackson Kim, Watson Jo
University of Toronto andWomen’s College Research Institute, 155 College Street, Toronto, ON, M5T 1P8, Canada.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014 Dec 15;2014(12):CD007366. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007366.pub2.
Leading health authorities all recommend exclusive breastfeeding to six months' postpartum. While most women initiate breastfeeding, many discontinue due to difficulties encountered rather than maternal choice. One common breastfeeding difficulty is painful nipples. Research has identified poor infant positioning or latch as a common cause of painful nipples. While many different interventions designed to reduce nipple pain in breastfeeding women have been evaluated, it is unclear which intervention is the most effective treatment. An understanding of nipple pain and treatment options are needed to improve breastfeeding duration and exclusivity rates and to address systematically one of the most frequent difficulties encountered by breastfeeding women.
To assess the effects of all interventions in the resolution or reduction of nipple pain and the impact of the interventions on other outcomes such as nipple trauma, nipple infections, breast mastitis, breastfeeding duration, breastfeeding exclusivity, and maternal satisfaction.
We searched the Cochrane Pregnancy and Childbirth Group's Trials Register (30 September 2014) and scanned secondary references.
All randomised or quasi-randomised controlled trials designed to evaluate any intervention for treating nipple pain among breastfeeding women. Trials using a cluster-randomised design were eligible for inclusion. Cross-over trials were not eligible for inclusion. The following interventions were eligible for inclusion compared with each other or usual care (i.e. education only): pharmacological (e.g. antifungal creams); non-pharmacological topical treatments (e.g. lanolin); dressings (e.g. hydrogel dressings); nipple protection devices (e.g. breast shells), phototherapy, and expressed breast milk. Nipple pain in women who are feeding with expressed breast milk (i.e. women of infants in neonatal units) is associated with other methods of removing milk from the mother's breast such as manual expression and various types of breast pumps. Nipple pain and subsequent treatment is different in this unique maternal population and thus we excluded women solely feeding with expressed breast milk from this review.
Two review authors independently assessed trials for inclusion, extracted data, evaluated methodological quality, and checked data for accuracy. We sought additional information from several trial researchers.
We included four trials of good methodological quality involving 656 women in the review. The four included trials evaluated five different interventions including glycerine pads, lanolin with breast shells, lanolin alone, expressed breast milk, and an all-purpose nipple ointment. All studies included education to position the infant at the breast correctly as part of routine postpartum care to both treatment and control groups.Pooled data existed only for the comparison of lanolin versus usual care. We did not pool data for other outcomes due to either heterogeneity in outcome measures or differing interventions.There was no evidence that glycerine gel dressings or breast shells with lanolin significantly improved nipple pain. One trial found no clear differences in nipple pain (at one to three days, four to five days, or six to seven days' post-treatment) between women who applied lanolin or nothing to their nipples. In contrast, the same trial found that women who applied expressed breast milk had significantly lower perceptions of nipple pain following four to five days of treatment than women who applied lanolin. However, this beneficial effect was not maintained after six to seven days of treatment. There were no group differences in nipple pain perceptions at any assessment between women who applied expressed breast milk and women who applied nothing. Women who applied an "all-purpose nipple ointment", in comparison to women who applied lanolin, had no improvement in nipple pain after seven days of treatment. There was insufficient evidence that glycerine gel dressings, lanolin with breast shells, lanolin alone, expressed breast milk, or all-purpose nipple ointment improved maternal perceptions of nipple pain.Overall, there was insufficient evidence to recommend any intervention for the treatment of nipple pain. However, one important finding was that regardless of the treatment used, for most women nipple pain reduced to mild levels after approximately seven to 10 days' postpartum. The provision of anticipatory guidance regarding usual time to pain reduction may be a useful strategy in assisting women to continue to breastfeed and to do so exclusively. The overall quality of the evidence for the primary outcome of nipple pain as assessed using GRADE was of low quality, mainly because single studies with few participants contributed data for analysis.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There was insufficient evidence that glycerine gel dressings, breast shells with lanolin, lanolin alone, or the all-purpose nipple ointment significantly improved maternal perceptions of nipple pain. The results from these four trials of good methodological quality suggested that applying nothing or just expressed breast milk may be equally or more beneficial in the short-term experience of nipple pain than the application of an ointment such as lanolin.The quality of the evidence for this review did not lead to robust conclusions regarding the objectives assessed. We included only four trials, incorporating 656 women, in the review and all four trials compared varying interventions, participants, study outcome measures, and standards of usual care. The methodological quality of the included studies was good but the overall quality of the evidence for the primary outcome of nipple pain was of low quality, mainly because single studies with few participants contributed data for analysis.
主要卫生当局均建议产后纯母乳喂养至六个月。虽然大多数女性开始进行母乳喂养,但许多人因遇到困难而非母亲自身选择而停止。一个常见的母乳喂养困难是乳头疼痛。研究已确定婴儿姿势不良或含接不当是乳头疼痛的常见原因。虽然已经评估了许多旨在减轻母乳喂养女性乳头疼痛的不同干预措施,但尚不清楚哪种干预措施是最有效的治疗方法。需要了解乳头疼痛及治疗选择,以提高母乳喂养持续时间和纯母乳喂养率,并系统解决母乳喂养女性最常遇到的困难之一。
评估所有干预措施在缓解或减轻乳头疼痛方面的效果,以及这些干预措施对其他结局的影响,如乳头创伤、乳头感染、乳腺乳腺炎、母乳喂养持续时间、纯母乳喂养率和母亲满意度。
我们检索了Cochrane妊娠与分娩组试验注册库(2014年9月30日)并查阅了二次参考文献。
所有旨在评估母乳喂养女性乳头疼痛治疗干预措施的随机或半随机对照试验。采用整群随机设计的试验符合纳入标准。交叉试验不符合纳入标准。以下干预措施相互比较或与常规护理(即仅进行教育)比较时符合纳入标准:药理学(如抗真菌乳膏);非药理学局部治疗(如羊毛脂);敷料(如水凝胶敷料);乳头保护装置(如乳罩)、光疗和挤出的母乳。用挤出的母乳喂养的女性(即新生儿病房婴儿的母亲)的乳头疼痛与从母亲乳房吸出乳汁的其他方法有关,如手动挤奶和各种类型的吸奶器。在这个独特的母亲群体中,乳头疼痛及后续治疗有所不同,因此我们将仅用挤出的母乳喂养的女性排除在本综述之外。
两位综述作者独立评估试验是否纳入、提取数据、评估方法学质量并检查数据准确性。我们向几位试验研究者寻求了更多信息。
我们纳入了四项方法学质量良好的试验,共656名女性。纳入的四项试验评估了五种不同的干预措施,包括甘油垫、含乳罩的羊毛脂、单独的羊毛脂、挤出的母乳和一种通用乳头软膏。所有研究都将正确将婴儿置于乳房的教育作为产后常规护理的一部分纳入治疗组和对照组。仅存在羊毛脂与常规护理比较的汇总数据。由于结局测量的异质性或不同的干预措施,我们未对其他结局进行数据汇总。没有证据表明甘油凝胶敷料或含羊毛脂的乳罩能显著改善乳头疼痛。一项试验发现,在乳头涂抹羊毛脂或不涂抹任何东西的女性之间,治疗后1至3天、4至5天或6至7天的乳头疼痛没有明显差异。相比之下,同一试验发现,在治疗4至5天后,涂抹挤出母乳的女性比涂抹羊毛脂的女性乳头疼痛的感觉明显更低。然而,在治疗6至7天后,这种有益效果并未持续。在任何评估中,涂抹挤出母乳的女性和不涂抹任何东西的女性之间在乳头疼痛感觉上没有组间差异。与涂抹羊毛脂的女性相比,涂抹“通用乳头软膏”的女性在治疗7天后乳头疼痛没有改善。没有足够的证据表明甘油凝胶敷料、含羊毛脂的乳罩、单独的羊毛脂、挤出的母乳或通用乳头软膏能改善母亲对乳头疼痛的感觉。总体而言,没有足够的证据推荐任何治疗乳头疼痛的干预措施。然而,一个重要发现是,无论使用何种治疗方法,对于大多数女性来说,乳头疼痛在产后约7至10天后会减轻到轻度水平。提供关于疼痛减轻的通常时间的预期指导可能是帮助女性继续母乳喂养并纯母乳喂养的有用策略。使用GRADE评估的乳头疼痛主要结局的证据总体质量较低,主要是因为参与人数少的单项研究提供了分析数据。
没有足够的证据表明甘油凝胶敷料、含羊毛脂的乳罩、单独的羊毛脂或通用乳头软膏能显著改善母亲对乳头疼痛的感觉。这四项方法学质量良好的试验结果表明,在乳头疼痛的短期体验中,不涂抹任何东西或仅涂抹挤出的母乳可能比涂抹羊毛脂等软膏同样有益或更有益。本综述的证据质量并未得出关于所评估目标的有力结论。我们在综述中仅纳入了四项试验,共656名女性,且所有四项试验比较了不同的干预措施、参与者、研究结局测量和常规护理标准。纳入研究的方法学质量良好,但乳头疼痛主要结局的证据总体质量较低,主要是因为参与人数少的单项研究提供了分析数据。