| Literature DB >> 30200404 |
Laura Galante1, Amber M Milan2, Clare M Reynolds3, David Cameron-Smith4,5,6, Mark H Vickers7, Shikha Pundir8.
Abstract
Male and female infants respond differentially to environmental stimuli, with different growth and neurodevelopmental trajectories. Male infants are more likely to be disadvantaged when subjected to adversity and show a higher risk of perinatal complications. However, the underlying causes of this sex-bias are not well defined and optimising the early life nutritional care may be necessary to minimise the "male disadvantage" that may be experienced early in life. Experimental models have demonstrated that animal milk composition differs according to offspring sex, suggesting that the tailoring of early life nutrition may be one mechanism to maximise health protection and development to infants of both sexes. However, evidence for a sex-specificity in human milk composition is limited and conflicting, with studies documenting higher milk energy content for either male or female infants. These data show sex differences, however, there has been limited compositional analysis of the current data nor strategies proposed for how sex-specific compositional differences in early life nutrition may be used to improve infant health. The present narrative review highlights that an improved understanding of sex-specific human milk composition is essential for promoting optimal infant growth and development.Entities:
Keywords: breastfeeding; early life nutrition; human milk; infant growth; postnatal outcomes; sex-specificity
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30200404 PMCID: PMC6165076 DOI: 10.3390/nu10091194
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Overview of animal studies on sex-specificity in maternal milk.
| Species | Sample Size | Offspring Age at Collection | Sex-Specific Difference | Study | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Rhesus Macaque ( | 106 | 3–4 months | ↑ energy and ↑ fat for males | Hinde, 2007 [ |
| 114 (62 F, 52 M) | ↓ volume ↑ energy density for males | Hinde, 2009 [ | |||
| 104 (61 F, 43 M) | ↑ calcium for females | Hinde et al., 2013 [ | |||
|
| Holstein breed of cow ( | 113,750 (data from lactation records) | not reported | ↑ volume for females | Hinde et al., 2014 [ |
| Red deer ( | 91 (44 M, 47 F) | 2, 6, 10 and 14 weeks | ↑ volume, ↑ protein, ↑ fat and ↑ lactose for males | Landete-Catillejos et al., 2005 [ | |
|
| Kangaroo ( | 91 | 6–10 months | ↑ protein for males | Quesnel et al., 2017 [ |
| Wallaby ( | 2 milking sessions: 15 in July (6 M, 9 F), 11 in October (4 M, 7 F) | 4–8 months | ↑ protein for males | Robert and Braun, 2012 [ | |
F, female offspring; M, male offspring; ↑, higher compared to the opposite sex; ↓, lower compared to the opposite sex.
Summary of human research on sex-specific human milk (HM) composition.
| Study | Country | Sample Size | Collection Methods | Infant Age at Collection | Findings | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yahya et al., 2009 [ | Iraq | 109 (52 M, 57 F) | Foremilk collected | Not specified | ↑ calcium for females, ↑ volume and phosphorus for males | Composition not representative of hindmilk |
| Powe et al., 2010 [ | United States of America | 25 | Breast was emptied by pump expression (mother’s pump or study pump). | 2–5 months | ↑ energy content (derived by carbohydrates, protein and lipid content) for males | Small sample size, inconsistent sampling time and use of instruments for milk collection, inconsistency of stage of lactation at sampling |
| Hahn et al., 2016 [ | South Korea | 478 (244 M, 234 F) | Sample collected during day time | 0–3 months | ↑ carbohydrate and energy content for females | Inconsistent sampling time, Absence of information on maternal diet and anthropometry, inconsistency of stage of lactation at sampling |
| Fujita et al., 2012 [ | Kenya | 83 (47 M, 36 F) | Foremilk collected in the morning by manual expression | Not specified | ↑ fat for females only in mothers with a low socioeconomic status | Composition not representative of hindmilk |
| Quinn, 2013 [ | Philippines | 103 (52 M, 51 F) | Sample collected in the morning by manual expression after mother nursed the infants for approximately 3 minutes | 0–18 months | No significant differences were found between male and female infants in HM composition | Composition not representative of foremilk, inconsistency in stage of lactation at sampling |
| Fields et al., 2017 [ | Australia | 37(16 M, 21 F) | Breast emptied by pump expression | 1 and 6 months | ↑ insulin and leptin for females born to obese mothers | Small sample size |
F, female infant; M, male infant; ↑, higher compared to the opposite sex.
Overview of animal and human studies on sex-specific response to early life nutrition.
| Sample Size | Nutrition | Sex-Specific Response | Limitations | Study | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Animal | Sheep ( | 42 | Ewe’s milk + milk fortifiers vs. Ewe’s milk + water | ↑ Insulin response in supplemented males, ↓ insulin response in supplemented females | Absence of direct estimates of milk composition and feeding behaviours | Jaquiery et al., 2016 [ |
| Rhesus Macaque ( | 108 | Maternal milk with ↑ cortisol | Males were more nervous and less confident | Absence of other hormonal measurements and lack of sensitive methodology to measure cortisol in milk | Hinde et al., 2015 [ | |
| Human | 752 | HM vs. FM | Breastfed same-sex twins were on average 1 inch taller and 12 pounds heavier than opposite-sex twins | Absence of HM compositional analyses and subjects’ body composition | Kanazawa and Segal, 2017 [ | |
| 424 | Preterm FM vs. term FM | Preterm males fed preterm formula had ↑ Bayley’s test scores at 18 months | Absence of full term control group | Lucas et al., 1990 [ | ||
| 76 | Standard vs. high-nutrient diet | Male adolescents fed with high-nutrient diet after preterm birth had larger caudate nucleus volume and verbal IQ | Small sample size, absence of a full term control group | Isaacs et al., 2008 [ |
↑, higher compared to control and opposite sex; ↓, lower compared to control and opposite sex; IQ, intelligence quotient; FM, formula milk.