| Literature DB >> 30873395 |
Guido E Moro1, Claude Billeaud2, Buffin Rachel3, Javier Calvo4, Laura Cavallarin5, Lukas Christen6, Diana Escuder-Vieco7, Antoni Gaya4, David Lembo8, Aleksandra Wesolowska9, Sertac Arslanoglu10, Debbie Barnett11, Enrico Bertino12, Clair-Yves Boquien13, Corinna Gebauer14, Anne Grovslien15, Gillian A Weaver16, Jean-Charles Picaud3,17.
Abstract
Background: A mother's own milk (MOM) is the gold standard for the feeding and nutrition of preterm and full term infants. When MOM is not available or there is not enough, donor human milk (DHM) should be used. Milk delivered to Human Milk Banks (HMBs) should be pasteurized to inactivate viral and bacterial agents. Currently, a pasteurization process at 62.5°C for 30 min (Holder pasteurization, HoP) is recommended in all international HMBs guidelines. State of the art: It is known that HoP affects some of the nutritional and biological components of human milk. Studies have demonstrated that temperature cycle in HoP is not always controlled or calibrated. A better check of these parameters in the pasteurizers on the market today may contribute to an improvement of the quality of HM, still maintaining some of the negative effects of the heat treatment of human milk. So, food industry, and dairy industry in particular, are evaluating innovative methodologies alternative to HoP to better preserve the nutritional and biological properties of fresh human milk, while assuring at least the same microbiological safety of HoP. The most studied processing techniques include High-Temperature-Short-Time (HTST) pasteurization, High Pressure Processing (HPP), and Ultraviolet-C (UV-C) irradiation. HTST is a thermal process in which milk is forced between plates or pipes that are heated on the outside by hot water at a temperature of 72°C for 5-15 s. HPP is a non-thermal processing method that can be applied to solid and liquid foods. This technology inactivates pathogenic microorganisms by applying a high hydrostatic pressure (usually 300-800 MPa) during short-term treatments (<5-10 min). UV irradiation utilizes short-wavelength ultraviolet radiation in the UV-C region (200-280 nm), which is harmful to microorganisms. It is effective in destroying the nucleic acids in these organisms, so that their DNA is disrupted by UV radiation. Aim: The aim of this paper is to present the EMBA recommendations on processing of HM, based on the most recent results obtained with these new technologies. Conclusions: Although research on the most promising technologies that will represent an alternative to HoP (HTST, HPP, UV-C) in the future is progressing, it is now important to recognize that the consistency and quality assurance of the pasteurizers on the market today represent a fundamental component that was previously lacking in the Holder approach.Entities:
Keywords: donor human milk; human milk; human milk bank; infant nutrition; preterm infants; processing of human milk
Year: 2019 PMID: 30873395 PMCID: PMC6403467 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2019.00049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Criteria for qualification of human milk pasteurizers (12, 14, 15).
|
Measurement by calibrated temperature probes Independent of the pasteurizer Regular distribution of the probes inside the pasteurizer One probe for 8–10 bottles Qualification repeated once a year and after major intervention, and performed on three pasteurization cycles Temperature of the plateau as close as possible to 62.5°C and below 64°C Duration of the plateau as close as possible to 30 min and <35 min (time calculated when all probes have reached 62.5°C) Exposition time over 58°C <50 min for each probe Exposition time from 62.5 to 6°C ≤ 1 h |
Figure 1Prototype and parameters utilized for high pressure processing of human milk.
Figure 2Schematic representation of the device used to treat donor human milk with UV-irradiation.
Advantages and disadvantages of the processing techniques described in this paper.
| Low-Temperature Long-Time Pasteurization (LTLT), known as Holder Pasteurization (HoP) | - Best known methodology | - Reduction/disruption of important nutritional and immunological factors of human milk |
| High-Temperature Short-Time Pasteurization (HTST Pasteurization) | - Utilized in dairy industry since 1930s | - Prototypes have been used for comparative studies |
| High Pressure Processing (HPP) | - No thermal stress (processing at low temperature) | - Antiviral activity needs a more deep evaluation |
| Ultraviolet-C irradiation (UV irradiation) | - Emerging food preservation technique that retains higher quantities of bioactive components | - Application of UV-C technology is difficult in human milk |
Figure 3Workflow for assessing the performance of new pasteurization technologies for human milk. *For the qualification of the Holder pasteurizer, see Buffin et al. (12).
Parameters to evaluate for validation of new pasteurization technologies.
| sIgA | ng/ml | Giribaldi et al. ( | |
| BSSL activity | μmol/min/ml | Giribaldi et al. ( | |
| Lysozyme activity | U/μl | Giribaldi et al. ( | |
| 1.2 × 106 | Absent in 25 ml | EN/ISO 11290, 1996 ( | |
| 3.0 × 106 | <100 | EN/ISO 6888, 1999 ( | |
| 1.6 × 106 | Absent in 10 ml | AFNOR V08-054, 2009 ( | |
| CMV | Absent | Hamprecht et al. ( | |
| HIV | Absent | Giribaldi et al. ( | |
For the design of the microbiological challenge test, see Giribaldi et al. (.
Or equivalent methods.