Breastfeeding duration is associated with favourable body composition and lower glycoprotein acetyls in later life

Congratulations to Prof Fionnuala McAuliffe, Prof Rachel Crowley, Prof Patrick Twomey and all involved in their recently published paper researching the impact of breastfeeding duration.

Objective: The aim of the present study was to investigate associations between lifetime breastfeeding behaviours and cardiovascular risk in later reproductive years.

Method: This was a prospective 10-year longitudinal cohort study of 168 parous women. Health, lifestyle and infant feeding questionnaires, blood samples, anthropometry and body composition were collected. Cardiovascular risk was estimated using QRISK®3 and hierarchical multiple linear regression analysis performed.

Results: Mean age was 42.4 years (SD 3.8; range 31-50) and 98.7% (n = 156/158) were premenopausal. Ever breastfeeding rates were 72.6% (n = 122/168) and 37.5% (n = 63/168) lifetime ≥12 months breastfeeding duration. Median durations were 5.5 weeks for exclusive breastfeeding (IQR 35.8; range 0-190) and 30.5 weeks for any breastfeeding (IQR 84.0; range 0-488). Breastfeeding duration was not associated with QRISK®3 scores in adjusted models. Lower glycoprotein acetyls were associated with ever breastfeeding (P = 0.03), and lifetime breastfeeding ≥12 months (P = 0.001). Lifetime breastfeeding ≥12 months and longer exclusive breastfeeding were associated with lower fat mass index (P = 0.03, P = 0.01), tissue percentage fat (P = 0.02, P = 0.009) and visceral adipose tissue volume (P = 0.04, P = 0.025) after correcting for confounders including body mass index.

Conclusion: Longer breastfeeding is associated with favourable body composition and lower glycoprotein acetyls, a novel inflammatory biomarker associated with cardiometabolic risk. Breastfeeding is a low-cost, health promoting behaviour for women and infants. Pregnant women, especially those at higher risk of cardiovascular disease, should be counselled about the potential benefits of exclusive and longer breastfeeding duration.