| Literature DB >> 32391870 |
Katharine Jarrold1, Bartosz Helfer1, Mona Eskander2, Helen Crawley3,4, Jillian Trabulsi5, Laura E Caulfield6, Gillian Duffy7, Vanessa Garcia-Larsen6, Deborah Hayward2, Matthew Hyde8, Suzan Jeffries1,9, Mikael Knip10,11, Jo Leonardi-Bee12, Elizabeth Loder13,14, Caroline J Lodge15, Adrian J Lowe15, William McGuire16, David Osborn17, Hildegard Przyrembel18, Mary J Renfrew19, Paula Trumbo20, John Warner1, Barbara Schneeman21, Robert J Boyle1,22.
Abstract
Importance: Breast milk substitutes (BMS) are important nutritional products evaluated in clinical trials. Concerns have been raised about the risk of bias in BMS trials, the reliability of claims that arise from such trials, and the potential for BMS trials to undermine breastfeeding in trial participants. Existing clinical trial guidance does not fully address issues specific to BMS trials.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32391870 PMCID: PMC7215627 DOI: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2020.0578
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAMA Pediatr ISSN: 2168-6203 Impact factor: 16.193
Figure. Summary of Delphi Consensus Process
A summary of the actions taken during each step of the Delphi consensus process is shown. BMS indicates breast milk substitute.
Definition of Consensus for the Delphi Process
| Consensus classification | Description | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Essential | Consensus that the criterion is essential to the design or conduct of BMS trials | ≥70% Of experts scoring as 7-9 and <15% of experts scoring as 1-3 |
| Recommended | Consensus that the criterion is recommended with regard to the design or conduct of BMS trials | ≥70% Of experts scoring as 4-6 and <15% of experts scoring as 1-3 |
| Out | Consensus that the criterion should not be included in the core methodological criteria | ≥70% Of experts scoring as 1-3 and <15% of experts scoring as 7-9 |
| No consensus | Uncertainty about importance of the criterion | Anything else |
Abbreviations: BMS, breast milk substitute; GRADE, Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations.
Consensus classification used the GRADE method. A score of 1 to 3 corresponds to not important, a score of 4 to 6 to corresponds to important but not critical, and a score of 7 to 9 corresponds to critical.[20]
Abbreviated Checklist of Criteria Specific for Clinical Trials of BMS
| Domain, item No. | Consensus statement |
|---|---|
| BMS composition and formulation | |
| 4a | The trial protocol and trial reports clearly describe the composition and formulation of the experimental and control BMS and their relationship, if any, to existing BMS products marketed anywhere in the world |
| 4b | The experimental and control BMS both meet legally required compositional standards, and any instructions for safe reconstitution of BMS by trial participants are consistent with relevant national or international guidance |
| 4c | The trial protocol and trial reports clearly describe any differences between experimental and control BMS which are additional to the constituent(s) of interest and consider their potential impact on the trial results |
| 4d | Appropriate preclinical studies have been performed for previously untested components of BMS |
| Intervention | |
| 7a | For trials with a primary noninferiority or equivalence objective, such as growth and tolerance trials, participants should be exclusively BMS fed at enrollment |
| 7b | The trial protocol and trial reports describe how intake of experimental and control BMS is recorded during the trial, and the trial reports summarize experimental and control BMS intake in each treatment group during the intervention period |
| 7c | Trial participants’ intake of any foods other than experimental and control BMS during the intervention and data collection periods is recorded |
| 7d | The age of infants at the start and end of the intervention period is appropriate for the trial objectives, and the age range at enrollment is sufficiently narrow for treatment effects to be comparable across the trial population |
| Outcome assessment | |
| 8c | For growth outcomes, trial reports should comment on whether metabolic and developmental outcomes were also evaluated |
| Analysis | |
| 12b | Statistical analyses which were not prespecified in the trial protocol are interpreted with caution and are not used as the basis for claims in the trial conclusions, or to support recommendations for infant feeding |
| Ethics for trials in BMS-fed infants | |
| 14 | For trials where participants are all exclusively BMS fed at enrollment, such as growth and tolerance trials, carers’ decision not to breastfeed should be firmly established prior to enrollment in the trial |
| Ethics for trials where some participants consume breast milk | |
| 15a | The ethics statement in the trial protocol and trial reports clearly states how breastfeeding was supported during the trial |
| 15b | Trial methods do not involve anything that may be interpreted as an incentive to introduce BMS to an infant’s diet and emphasize the superiority of breastfeeding over BMS in all literature |
| 15c | Randomization and treatment allocation do not occur until the time point when a participant expresses an intention to introduce BMS, and participants are offered skilled breastfeeding support from a trained breastfeeding counselor at this stage, prior to randomization and introduction of experimental and control BMS |
| 15d | Incentives to participate in the trial do not include provision of free or discounted BMS, samples, equipment, or other gifts related to BMS and its marketing; if free or discounted BMS is felt to be essential, then a similar level of reimbursement should be provided for continued breast milk feeding |
| 15e | For trials which involve groups of infants at increased risk of a severe adverse event related to BMS use, a high level of scrutiny regarding the possibility of a negative impact on breast milk feeding is required |
| Limitations | |
| 19c | Trial reports discuss the limitations of any findings which are based on analysis of participants with a minimum level of experimental or control BMS intake |
| Conflict of interests | |
| 20d | An investigator who is independent of the BMS industry takes overall responsibility for the conduct of the trial, planning and conduct of statistical analyses, decision to publish, reporting, and interpretation of the trial findings, and ensures that the planning and conduct of statistical analyses are led independently of the BMS industry |
Abbreviations: BMS, breast milk substitute; GRADE, Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations.
Item No. refers to the full criteria in eTables 1 and 2 in the Supplement. Criteria were scored using the GRADE scale.[20]
For growth and tolerance trials, or other trials with noninferiority or equivalence objectives, participants should be fully BMS fed and the decision not to breastfeed should be firmly established prior to enrollment in the trial. For other trials, where some participants may be receiving breast milk at enrollment or during the intervention period, trial design and conduct should comply with the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes[22] and subsequent relevant World Health Assembly resolutions to avoid undermining breast milk feeding.
Recommended criteria. All other criteria were classified as essential (Table 1).