Asthma control in the postpartum period is important for the same reasons as it is in healthy, non-pregnant women, and the exacerbation risk is similar in the two groups of women. There are limited studies about the safety of asthma drugs during breastfeeding. Published studies in the postpartum period have been small case series with generally short follow-up.
Systemic absorption of inhaled drugs is generally minimal and causes little harm to the infant.14 The infant's exposure is 10 to 1000 times less than during pregnancy.21 The amount ingested through the mother's milk is far below the therapeutic level for an infant – mostly under 3% of a therapeutic dose per kilogram bodyweight.22
Short-acting beta agonists may be used at the usual doses.10 Maintenance doses of inhaled budesonide (200 microgram or 400 microgram twice daily) result in negligible systemic exposure for the breastfed infant.23 Once absorbed, inhaled budesonide is a weak systemic steroid and it is unlikely that clinically relevant concentrations would be transferred to the infant.13 Similarly, only 30% of fluticasone is absorbed systemically and the majority is metabolised by first-pass metabolism.24 No studies are available for the safety of ciclesonide and cromolyn (milk:plasma ratios unknown) in breastfeeding mothers, but in vitro studies show that the infant would be exposed to virtually undetectable concentrations so is unlikely to be at risk.13
There are no human studies of montelukast in breastfeeding, but animal studies have detected excretion into milk. Alternative treatment with short-acting beta agonists, long-acting beta agonists or inhaled corticosteroids should be considered during breastfeeding, particularly as montelukast is taken orally.10
Prednisolone at recommended doses is thought to be safe since the amount excreted in human milk is low with daily doses up to 80 mg. It is recommended to withhold feeds for four hours after each dose to reduce infant exposure. Prednisolone is preferred over prednisone, as prednisone is converted to prednisolone in vivo, causing a double peak of parent medicine and metabolite.10