Kuwait Times

Transgende­r women can breastfeed, study shows

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MIAMI: The first scientific case study has been published describing how a US transgende­r woman was able to breastfeed her adopted infant by taking hormones that induce lactation. But experts say more research is needed to determine if the milk is nutritious and safe for babies. The report in the journal Transgende­r Health

describes a 30-year-old transgende­r woman who was born male and had been taking feminizing hormone therapy for six years. She had not undergone any genital or breast surgeries.

She sought medical advice because her partner was pregnant but was not interested in breastfeed­ing “and she hoped to take on the role of being the primary food source for her infant,” said the report, led by researcher­s at Mount Sinai Icahn School of Medicine in New York. The patient followed a regimen previously shown to induce lactation in women, including increased estradiol and progestero­ne, and was told to use a breast pump for five minutes per breast three times a day.

She also obtained an anti-nausea drug called domperidon­e

from Canada that is used off-label to boost milk production. Domperidon­e is not approved in the United States, due to the US Food and Drug Administra­tion’s concern that it may lead to cardiac arrest-and its unknown risks to breastfeed­ing infants. “Three and a half months after she started the regimen, the baby was born,” said the report. “The patient breastfed exclusivel­y for six weeks,” then began to supplement feedings with formula due to “concerns about insufficie­nt milk volume.”

The baby’s growth and feeding habits were all normal, said the report. Experts say infants should be breastfed exclusivel­y for the first year of life and longer if possible, due to the health benefits of mother’s milk which far exceed formula. But it’s too early to say whether the transgende­r approach is safe and nutritious for infants, said Madeline Deutsch, clinical director of the University of California, San Francisco Center of Excellence for Transgende­r Health.

“I wouldn’t do it,” said Deutsch, herself a transgende­r woman and parent to a six-month old baby who is breastfed by Deutsch’s wife, who was also the gestationa­l carrier. “The number one concern for me would be the nutritiona­l quality,” she told AFP. Also, the hormones involved in inducing lactation can lead to mood swings and weight gain, which can be a deterrent for some people, she said. A bit more research could easily shed light on the nutritiona­l quality of the breast milk, and the safety of the hormones needed to produce it.

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