The study by the University of Massachusetts Amherst, published in the journal Obstetrics & Gynecology has found that vaccinated mothers pass COVID antibodies to their breastfeeding babies. It measured the immune response to the COVID-19 mRNA vaccine in both breast milk and the stools of breastfed infants.
“This research is the first to detect SARS-CoV-2 antibodies in stool samples from infants of vaccinated mothers,” says lead author Vignesh Narayanaswamy, a Ph.D. candidate in the breast milk research lab of senior author Kathleen Arcaro, professor of environmental toxicology in the Department of Veterinary and Animal Sciences. “This is really important because women want to know whether their babies have these antibodies, and our study shows that antibodies are being transferred via breast milk. Providing this compelling evidence is the motivation for women to continue breastfeeding after they receive the vaccine.”
Narayanaswamy notes another important takeaway: the antibodies were detected in infants regardless of age – from 1.5 months old to 23 months old.
Thirty lactating women from across the U.S. – most of the healthcare workers – were enrolled in the study. They received the COVID-19 mRNA vaccine between January and April 2021. The women provided breast milk samples before they were vaccinated, across two to three weeks after their first vaccine dose and across three weeks after the second dose. They also gave samples of their blood, spotted on cards, 19 days after the first dose and 21 days after the second dose. Infant stool samples were collected 21 days after the mothers’ second vaccination. Pre-pandemic samples of breast milk, dried blood spots and infant stools were used as controls for the study.