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Nutritional adequacy of a novel human milk fortifier from donkey milk in feeding preterm infants: study protocol of a randomized controlled clinical trial

BACKGROUND: Fortification of human milk is a standard practice for feeding very low birth weight infants. However, preterm infants often still experience suboptimal growth and feeding intolerance. New fortification strategies and different commercially available fortifiers have been developed. Comme...

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Autores principales: Coscia, Alessandra, Bertino, Enrico, Tonetto, Paola, Peila, Chiara, Cresi, Francesco, Arslanoglu, Sertac, Moro, Guido E, Spada, Elena, Milani, Silvano, Giribaldi, Marzia, Antoniazzi, Sara, Conti, Amedeo, Cavallarin, Laura
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5761142/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29316931
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12937-017-0308-8
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author Coscia, Alessandra
Bertino, Enrico
Tonetto, Paola
Peila, Chiara
Cresi, Francesco
Arslanoglu, Sertac
Moro, Guido E
Spada, Elena
Milani, Silvano
Giribaldi, Marzia
Antoniazzi, Sara
Conti, Amedeo
Cavallarin, Laura
author_facet Coscia, Alessandra
Bertino, Enrico
Tonetto, Paola
Peila, Chiara
Cresi, Francesco
Arslanoglu, Sertac
Moro, Guido E
Spada, Elena
Milani, Silvano
Giribaldi, Marzia
Antoniazzi, Sara
Conti, Amedeo
Cavallarin, Laura
author_sort Coscia, Alessandra
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Fortification of human milk is a standard practice for feeding very low birth weight infants. However, preterm infants often still experience suboptimal growth and feeding intolerance. New fortification strategies and different commercially available fortifiers have been developed. Commercially available fortifiers are constituted by a blend of ingredients from different sources, including plant oils and bovine milk proteins, thus presenting remarkable differences in the quality of macronutrients with respect to human milk. Based on the consideration that donkey milk has been suggested as a valid alternative for children allergic to cow’s milk proteins, due to its biochemical similarity to human milk, we hypothesized that donkey milk could be a suitable ingredient for developing an innovative human milk fortifier. The aim of the study is to evaluate feeding tolerance, growth and clinical short and long-term outcomes in a population of preterm infants fed with a novel multi-component fortifier and a protein concentrate derived from donkey milk, in comparison to an analogous population fed with traditional fortifier and protein supplement containing bovine milk proteins. METHODS: The study has been designed as a randomized, controlled, single-blind clinical trial. Infants born <1500 g and <32 weeks of gestational age were randomized to receive for 21 days either a combination of control bovine milk-based multicomponent fortifier and protein supplement, or a combination of a novel multicomponent fortifier and protein supplement derived from donkey milk. The fortification protocol followed is the same for the two groups, and the two diets were designed to be isoproteic and isocaloric. Weight, length and head circumference are measured; feeding tolerance is assessed by a standardized protocol. The occurrence of sepsis, necrotizing enterocolitis and adverse effects are monitored. DISCUSSION: This is the first clinical study investigating the use of a human milk fortifier derived from donkey milk for the nutrition of preterm infants. If donkey milk derived products will be shown to improve the feeding tolerance or either of the clinical, metabolic, neurological or auxological outcomes of preterm infants, it would be an absolute innovation in the field of feeding practices for preterm infants. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN -ISRCTN70022881.
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spelling pubmed-57611422018-01-16 Nutritional adequacy of a novel human milk fortifier from donkey milk in feeding preterm infants: study protocol of a randomized controlled clinical trial Coscia, Alessandra Bertino, Enrico Tonetto, Paola Peila, Chiara Cresi, Francesco Arslanoglu, Sertac Moro, Guido E Spada, Elena Milani, Silvano Giribaldi, Marzia Antoniazzi, Sara Conti, Amedeo Cavallarin, Laura Nutr J Study Protocol BACKGROUND: Fortification of human milk is a standard practice for feeding very low birth weight infants. However, preterm infants often still experience suboptimal growth and feeding intolerance. New fortification strategies and different commercially available fortifiers have been developed. Commercially available fortifiers are constituted by a blend of ingredients from different sources, including plant oils and bovine milk proteins, thus presenting remarkable differences in the quality of macronutrients with respect to human milk. Based on the consideration that donkey milk has been suggested as a valid alternative for children allergic to cow’s milk proteins, due to its biochemical similarity to human milk, we hypothesized that donkey milk could be a suitable ingredient for developing an innovative human milk fortifier. The aim of the study is to evaluate feeding tolerance, growth and clinical short and long-term outcomes in a population of preterm infants fed with a novel multi-component fortifier and a protein concentrate derived from donkey milk, in comparison to an analogous population fed with traditional fortifier and protein supplement containing bovine milk proteins. METHODS: The study has been designed as a randomized, controlled, single-blind clinical trial. Infants born <1500 g and <32 weeks of gestational age were randomized to receive for 21 days either a combination of control bovine milk-based multicomponent fortifier and protein supplement, or a combination of a novel multicomponent fortifier and protein supplement derived from donkey milk. The fortification protocol followed is the same for the two groups, and the two diets were designed to be isoproteic and isocaloric. Weight, length and head circumference are measured; feeding tolerance is assessed by a standardized protocol. The occurrence of sepsis, necrotizing enterocolitis and adverse effects are monitored. DISCUSSION: This is the first clinical study investigating the use of a human milk fortifier derived from donkey milk for the nutrition of preterm infants. If donkey milk derived products will be shown to improve the feeding tolerance or either of the clinical, metabolic, neurological or auxological outcomes of preterm infants, it would be an absolute innovation in the field of feeding practices for preterm infants. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN -ISRCTN70022881. BioMed Central 2018-01-09 /pmc/articles/PMC5761142/ /pubmed/29316931 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12937-017-0308-8 Text en © The Author(s). 2018 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Coscia, Alessandra
Bertino, Enrico
Tonetto, Paola
Peila, Chiara
Cresi, Francesco
Arslanoglu, Sertac
Moro, Guido E
Spada, Elena
Milani, Silvano
Giribaldi, Marzia
Antoniazzi, Sara
Conti, Amedeo
Cavallarin, Laura
Nutritional adequacy of a novel human milk fortifier from donkey milk in feeding preterm infants: study protocol of a randomized controlled clinical trial
title Nutritional adequacy of a novel human milk fortifier from donkey milk in feeding preterm infants: study protocol of a randomized controlled clinical trial
title_full Nutritional adequacy of a novel human milk fortifier from donkey milk in feeding preterm infants: study protocol of a randomized controlled clinical trial
title_fullStr Nutritional adequacy of a novel human milk fortifier from donkey milk in feeding preterm infants: study protocol of a randomized controlled clinical trial
title_full_unstemmed Nutritional adequacy of a novel human milk fortifier from donkey milk in feeding preterm infants: study protocol of a randomized controlled clinical trial
title_short Nutritional adequacy of a novel human milk fortifier from donkey milk in feeding preterm infants: study protocol of a randomized controlled clinical trial
title_sort nutritional adequacy of a novel human milk fortifier from donkey milk in feeding preterm infants: study protocol of a randomized controlled clinical trial
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5761142/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29316931
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12937-017-0308-8
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