Domperidone:
Domperidone (Motilium™) is a drug that has, as a side effect,
the increasing of milk production, probably by increasing prolactin production
by the pituitary gland. Prolactin is the hormone that stimulates the cells in
the mother's breast to produce milk. Domperidone increases prolactin secretion
indirectly, by interfering with the action of dopamine, whose action is to
decrease the secretion of prolactin by the pituitary gland. Domperidone is
generally used for disorders of the gastrointestinal tract (gut) and has not
been released in Canada for use as a stimulant for milk production. This does
not mean that it cannot be prescribed for this reason, but rather that the
manufacturer does not back its use for increasing milk production. However,
there are several studies that show that it works to increase milk production and
that it is safe. It has been used, for several years, in small infants who spit
up and lose weight, but was replaced until a few years ago by cisapride
(Prepulsid™) (cisapride has since been taken off the market because it can
cause serious cardiac problems). Domperidone is not in the same family of
medication as cisapride. Another, related, but older medication, metoclopramide
(Maxeran™), is also known to increase milk production, but it has frequent side
effects which have made its use for many nursing mothers unacceptable (fatigue,
irritability, depression). Domperidone has many fewer side effects because it
does not enter the brain tissue in significant amounts (does not pass the
blood-brain barrier).
In June of 2004, the Federal Drug Administration (FDA)
in the US put out a warning against using domperidone because of possible
cardiac side effects. This unfortunate step was taken without
considering the fact that the cardiac side effects occurred only when the drug
was taken intravenously by otherwise very sick patients. In all the years I
have used domperidone in so many mothers, I have not yet heard of any
significant cardiac side effects that could be attributed to domperidone.
Incidentally, the Federal Drug Administration has no authority outside the US,
and even in the US, compounding pharmacies, who are not regulated by the FDA,
are continuing to provide patients with domperidone.
When is it appropriate to use domperidone?
Domperidone must never be used as the first approach to
correcting breastfeeding difficulties. Domperidone is not a cure for all
things. It must not be used unless all other factors that may result in
insufficient milk supply have been dealt with first. (See handout: Protocol to
increase breastmilk intake by the baby). What can be done?
1. Correct the baby's latch so that the baby can obtain as
efficiently as possible the milk which the mother has available. Correcting the
latch may be all that is necessary to change a situation of "not enough
milk" to one of "plenty of milk".
2. Use breast compression to increase the intake of milk
(handout #15, Breast Compression).
3. Use milk expression after feedings to increase the supply.
4. Correct sucking problems, stopping the use of artificial
nipples (handout #5, Using a Lactation Aid, and #8, Finger Feeding) and other
stratagems.
Click here for information on how to order domperidone
Using domperidone for increasing milk production:
Domperidone works particularly well to increase milk
production under the following circumstances:
• It has frequently been noted that a mother who is pumping
milk for a sick or premature baby in hospital has a decrease in the amount she
pumps around four or five weeks after the baby is born. The reasons for this
decrease are likely many, but domperidone generally brings the amount of milk
pumped back to where it was or even to higher levels.
• When a mother has a decrease in milk supply, often
associated with the use of birth control pills (avoid œstrogen containing birth
control pills while breastfeeding), or on occasion, for no obvious reason when
the baby is three or four months old, domperidone will often bring the supply
back to normal. See the handout #25, Slow Weight Gain After the First Few
Months for reasons milk supply might decrease and fix what can be fixed.
Domperidone still works, but often less dramatically
when:
• The mother is pumping for a sick or premature baby but has
not managed to develop a full milk supply.
• The mother is trying to develop a full milk supply while
nursing an adopted baby.
• The mother is trying to wean the baby from supplements.
Side effects of domperidone:
As with all medications, side effects are possible, and many
have been reported with domperidone (textbooks often list any side effect ever
reported, but symptoms reported are not necessarily due to the drug a person is
taking). There is no such thing as a 100% safe drug. However, our clinical
experience has been that side effects in the mother are extremely uncommon,
except for increasing milk supply. Some side effects which mothers we have
treated have reported (very uncommonly, incidentally):
• headache which disappeared when the dose was reduced
(probably the most common side effect)
• abdominal cramps
• dry mouth
• alteration of menstrual periods
The amount that gets into the milk is so tiny that side
effects in the baby should not be expected. Mothers have not reported any to
us, in many years of use. Certainly the amount the baby gets through the milk
is a tiny percentage of what babies would get if being treated for spitting up.
Are there long term concerns about the use of
domperidone?
The manufacturer states in its literature that chronic
treatment with domperidone in rodents has resulted in increased numbers of
breast tumours in the rodents. The literature goes on to state that this has
never been documented in humans. Note that toxicity studies of medication
usually require treatment with huge doses over periods of time involving most
or all of the animal's lifetime. Note also that not breastfeeding increases the
risk of breast cancer, and breast cancer risk decreases the longer you
breastfeed.
Using domperidone:
Generally, we now start domperidone at 30 mg (three 10 mg
tablets) 3 times a day. In some situations we go as high as 40 mg 4 times a
day. Printouts from the pharmacy often suggest taking domperidone 30 minutes
before eating, but that is because of its use for digestive intolerance. You
can take the domperidone about every 8 hours, when it is convenient (there is
no need to wake up to keep to an 8 hour schedule—it does not make any
difference). Most mothers take the domperidone for 3 to 8 weeks, but sometimes
it is needed longer than that, and sometimes it is impossible for mothers to
maintain their milk supply without staying on domperidone. Mothers who are
nursing adopted babies may have to take the drug much longer. People taking
domperidone for stomach disorders are often taking it for many years.
After starting domperidone, it may take three or four days
before you notice any effect, though sometimes mothers notice an effect within
24 hours. It appears to take two to three weeks to get a maximum effect, but
some mothers have noted effects only after 4 or more weeks. It is reasonable to
give domperidone a trial of at least four, and better, six weeks before saying
it doesn’t work.
For more information on how to wean off the domperidone see
the handout: Domperidone 2.
Questions? (416) 813-5757 (option 3) or drjacknewman@sympatico.ca
or my book Dr. Jack Newman’s Guide
to Breastfeeding (called The Ultimate Breastfeeding Book of Answers in the USA)
Handout #19a. Domperidone. January 2005
Written by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC. © 2005