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Human-derived Human Milk Fortifiers (H2MF), Gut Microbiota and Oxidative Stress in Premature Infants

U

University of Manitoba

Status

Completed

Conditions

Microbial Colonization
Oxidative Stress
Very Low Birth Weight Baby
Premature Birth

Treatments

Dietary Supplement: H2MF

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT03214822
H2MF Study

Details and patient eligibility

About

This is a randomized controlled trial of a human-derived human milk fortifier (H2MF) vs standard bovine-derived human milk fortifier (HMF) evaluating fecal microbiota and fecal and urinary biomarkers of oxidative stress in premature infants.

Full description

While breast milk provides complete nutrition for full term infants, supplementation with human milk fortifiers (HMF) is required to achieve optimal weight gain in very low birthweight (VLBW) preterm neonates. Traditionally, HMF have been derived from bovine milk. Bovine-based infant formula has been shown to cause dysbiosis of the infant gut microbiome (Azad et al 2013) and increased oxidative stress in preterm neonates (Friel et al 2011). Microbiome dysbiosis and oxidative stress have been implicated in numerous inflammatory conditions, including both acute (eg. necrotizing enterocolitis, NEC) and long-term (eg. asthma, metabolic syndrome) sequela of preterm birth (Torrazza et al 2013, Goulet et al 2015, Flora et al 2007, Perrone et al 2014). Recent studies show that new human-derived HMF (H2MF) are superior to standard bovine HMF for nourishing VLBW preterm infants and preventing NEC (Sullivan et al 2010, Cristofalo et al 2013). However, the biological basis for these clinical benefits is unknown, which limits our ability to inform and improve feeding strategies for VLBW preterm infants. This will be the first study to evaluate the impact of H2MF on gut microbiota and oxidative stress in preterm infants.

Specific Objectives:

  1. To evaluate the effect of H2MF vs. HMF on gut microbiota composition in premature infants born <1250 gr between 26 and 30 weeks of gestational age.
  2. To evaluate the effect of H2MF vs. HMF on fecal and urinary biomarkers of oxidative stress in premature infants born <1250 gr between 26 and 30 weeks of gestational age.

Enrollment

30 patients

Sex

All

Ages

Under 7 days old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Male or female infant with birth weight <1250 grams
  • Gestational age between 26+0 to 30+0 weeks at birth
  • Able to adhere to feeding protocol
  • Parenteral nutrition must be started by day of life 2
  • Enteral feeding >80 ml/kg/d should be reached by day of life 14
  • Subject's parent(s)/legal guardian(s) has provided signed and dated informed consent and authorization to use protected health information, as required by national and local regulations.
  • In the investigator's opinion, the subject's parent(s)/legal guardian(s) understands and is able to comply with protocol requirements, instructions, and protocol-stated restrictions, and is likely to complete the study as planned.

Exclusion criteria

  • Gestational age > 30+0 weeks at birth (to guarantee a minimum of 3 weeks H2MF treatment, since fortification ends at 33+0 AGA)
  • Gestational age < 26+0 weeks at birth (to minimize baseline heterogeneity, since gestational age influences gut microbiota)
  • Received antibiotics on the first day of specimen collection (to minimize baseline heterogeneity, since antibiotics influence gut microbiota) Note: all infants are expected to receive up to 48 hr antibiotic prophylaxis at birth according to standard NICU protocol; this criterion will exclude infants receiving extended courses of antibiotics.
  • Received probiotics at any time (to minimize baseline heterogeneity, since probiotics influence gut microbiota)
  • Unlikely to survive the study period
  • Presence of clinically significant congenital heart disease or other major congenital malformation
  • Presence prior to enrollment of intestinal perforation or stage 2 necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) prior to tolerating fortified feeds

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

30 participants in 2 patient groups

HMF (standard of care)
No Intervention group
Description:
The HMF "Control Group" will receive the current standard feeding protocol of human milk fortified with bovine (cow) human milk fortifier (HMF)
H2MF
Experimental group
Description:
The H2MF "Intervention Group" will receive identical treatment with human-derived human milk fortifier (H2MF) replacing standard bovine HMF until the baby reaches an adjusted gestation age of 33 weeks; followed by a 5 day ween to standard HMF according to the manufacturer's recommendation.
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: H2MF

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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