| Literature DB >> 32326178 |
Jacopo Cerasani1, Federica Ceroni1, Valentina De Cosmi1,2, Alessandra Mazzocchi2, Daniela Morniroli3, Paola Roggero1,3, Fabio Mosca1,3, Carlo Agostoni1,2, Maria Lorella Giannì1,3.
Abstract
Preterm infants may show a higher risk of adverse health outcomes, such as the development of metabolic syndrome and cognitive impairment. The most recent evidence highlights that nutrition, body composition development, and early postnatal growth may play a role in the programming of these processes. Human milk feeding has been recommended as the natural feeding for preterm infants and as a cost-effective strategy for reducing disease and economic burden. Considering that the postnatal growth retardation and aberrant body composition shown by preterm infants at the time of hospital discharge still remain important issues, we performed a literature review, aiming to provide an update about the effect of human milk feeding on these processes. On the basis of our findings, human milk feeding in preterm infants, although related to a slower weight gain than formula feeding, is associated with a better recovery of body composition through the promotion of fat-free mass deposition, which may ultimately lead to better metabolic and neurodevelopmental outcomes. Promotion and support of human milk feeding should be considered a priority in preterm infants' care.Entities:
Keywords: body composition; growth; human milk feeding; preterm infant
Year: 2020 PMID: 32326178 PMCID: PMC7230190 DOI: 10.3390/nu12041155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1PRISMA 2009 research method flowchart.
Summary of the included studies about the effect of human milk on growth.
| Study | Type of Study | Population | Timing of Evaluation | Principal Aim | Method of Assessment | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colaizy et al. [ | Retrospective cohort study | From birth to discharge | Growth in VLBW fed with increasing proportions of HM | Anthropometric measurements | Wider reduction in weight z-score from birth to discharge in infants fed with HM > 75% compared to infants receiving HM < 75% | |
| Verd et al. [ | Multi-center pre-post retrospective study before and after implementation of a donor human milk policy | From birth to discharge | Growth in VLBW infants exclusively HM vs. FM fed | Anthropometric measurements | No difference of weight, length or HC z-score from birth to discharge between exclusively HM and FM-fed infants | |
| Brownell et al. [ | Single-centre retrospective study | At 36 weeks or at hospital discharge | Growth in preterm infants receiving exclusively HM or any FM | Anthropometric measurements | Reduction of adjusted mean growth velocity for weight for every 10% rise of DM amount (β −0.17, 95% CI −0.28 −0.05, |
Human milk (HM) = own mother’s or maternal milk (MM) and donor milk (DM) fed; Formula milk = FM; Gestational age (GA); Very low birth weight infants (VLBW); Extremely low birth weight (ELBW); HC (head circumference); CI (Confidence Interval).
Summary of the included studies about the effect of human milk on body composition.
| Study | Type of Study | Population | Timing of Evaluation | Principal Aim | Method of Assessment | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Giannì et al. [ | Observational cohort study | At term CGA | Body composition in late preterms infants fed with exclusively MM/any MM vs. FM | Air-displacement pletysmograph (PEA POD Infant Body Composition System) | Positive association of any MM feeding at discharge and at term CGA and exclusively MM feeding at term CGA with FFM content (β =−47.9, 95%, CI = −95.7; −0.18; | |
| Piemontese et al. [ | Longitudinal observational study | At term CGA | Body composition in VLBW preterm infants fed with HM at < 50% vs. HM ≥ 50% of the total volume intake | PEA POD Infant Body Composition System | Positive association between the HM % and FFM % after correction for birth weight and gender (β = 0.12 ± 0.05, | |
| Morlacchi et al. [ | Prospective observational study | At discharge and at term CGA | Body composition and protein balance in VLBW premature neonates exclusively MM vs. FM fed | PEA POD Infant Body Composition System | At discharge, higher nitrogen balance in MM-fed infants compared with FM fed (mean 488.3 ± 75 compared with 409.8 ± 85 mg kg−1 d−1, | |
| Mól et al. [ | Prospective cohort study | At birth and at term CGA | Body composition of VLBW newborns fed with either MM or FM compared to full-term infants | Multi-frequency impedance body composition monitor | In the FM-fed VLBW preterms compared to full-term newborns lower FFM % (83.5 vs. 85.5, |
Human milk (HM) = own mother’s or maternal milk (MM) and donor milk (DM) fed; Formula milk = FM; Gestational age (GA); Corrected gestational age (CGA); Very low birth weight infants (VLBW); Adipose tissue mass (ATM); Fat-free mass (FFM); CI (Confidence Interval).
Summary of the included studies about the effect of human milk on growth and body composition.
| Study | Type of Study | Population | Timing of Evaluation | Principal Aim | Method of Assessment | Main Findings-Growth | Main Findings Body-Composition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beliaeva et al. [ | Observational cohort study | From birth to discharge | Growth and body composition in premature infants fed with FM vs. FM + MM vs. exclusively MM | Anthropometric measuraments | Lower body weight, length, head and chest circumference at discharge in exclusively MM-fed infants compared to infants receiving FM ( | Higher ATM in FM group compared to MM fed infants ( | |
| Visuthranukul et al. [ | Single-centre longitudinal cohort study | At 12–15 months (visit 1) and at 18–22 months CGA (visit 2) | Growth and body composition of VLBW SGA vs. AGA exclusively fed with HM | Anthropometric measurements with centile (WHO growth data) | SGA greater BMI z-score gain from visit 1 to visit 2 (0.25 ± 1.10 vs. −0.21 ± 0.84, | No difference in body composition between the two groups | |
| Li et al. [ | Preplanned secondary analysis of the Nutritional Evaluation and Optimisation in Neonates (NEON) trial | At birth and at term CGA | Body composition at term CGA in very preterm infants HM vs. FM fed | Anthropometric measurements | Predominantly FM group weighed more than the exclusively HM-fed group, mean difference 283.6 g (95% CI, 121.6–445.6) | Higher FFM in predominantly FM-fed group than in exclusively HM-fed group, mean difference 257.4 g (95% CI, 139.1–375.7 g), |
Human milk (HM) = own mother’s or maternal milk (MM) and donor milk (DM) fed; Formula milk = FM; Gestational age (GA); Corrected gestational age (CGA); Small for gestational age (SGA); Appropriate for gestational age (AGA); Very low birth weight infants (VLBW); Adipose tissue mass (ATM); Fat-free mass (FFM); BMI (body mass index), HC (head circumference), CI (Confidence Interval).