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Oropharyngeal Administration of Mother's Colostrum for Premature Infants (NS-72393-360)

N

NorthShore University HealthSystem

Status

Completed

Conditions

Infection
Ventilator-associated Pneumonia
Enterocolitis, Necrotizing

Treatments

Other: oropharyngeal mother's milk
Other: oropharyngeal sterile water

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02116699
EH11-360

Details and patient eligibility

About

Extremely premature (BW<1250g) infants are at high risk for morbidity and mortality. Own mother's colostrum (OMC) and milk (OMM) protect against neonatal morbidity and are rich in immune factors which may provide immunostimulatory effects when administered oropharyngeally to extremely premature infants during the first weeks of life. The investigators hypothesize that infants who receive oropharyngeal mother's colostrum and milk will have significantly lower rates of infection and improved health outcomes, compared to infants who receive a placebo.

Full description

Extremely premature (BW<1250g) infants are at high risk for morbidity and mortality. Own mother's colostrum (OMC) and milk (OMM) protect against neonatal morbidity and are rich in immune factors which may provide immunostimulatory effects when administered oropharyngeally to extremely premature infants during the first weeks of life. This 5-year placebo-controlled, double-blind randomized controlled trial will evaluate the safety, efficacy and health outcomes of oropharyngeal administration of OMC/OMM in a sample of 622 (total patients enrolled) extremely premature infants with the following aims: Aim 1. To determine if oropharyngeal administration of OMC/OMM to extremely premature infants will reduce the risk of late-onset sepsis or death as the primary outcome, and necrotizing enterocolitis and ventilator-associated pneumonia as pre-planned secondary outcomes. Aim 2: To determine if extremely premature infants who receive OMC/OMM via the oropharyngeal route have a shorter time to reach full enteral feeds and a shorter length of hospital stay. Aim 3: To determine if oropharyngeal administration of OMC/OMM will have immunostimulatory effects for extremely premature infants, as measured by (A) enhancement of gastrointestinal (fecal) microbiota, (B) improvement in antioxidant defense maturation or reduction of pro-oxidant status, and (C) maturation of immunostimulatory effects as measured by changes in urinary lactoferrin. Results will confirm whether extremely premature infants demonstrate a host-immune response to this intervention and whether there is a beneficial effect on common morbidities in these high risk patients.

Enrollment

260 patients

Sex

All

Ages

1 to 4 days old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Birthweight <1250g Mother plans to pump and provide breastmilk for at least 2 months Absence of severe congenital anomalies Admission to the neonatal intensive care unit within 24 hours after birth Ability to begin protocol within 96 hours of life

Exclusion criteria

Gastrointestinal anomaly pH < 7.0 on initial blood gas in NICU Maternal +HIV status Maternal drug or substance use that precludes infant from receiving mother's milk Tracheoesophageal fistula

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

260 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

oropharyngeal mother's milk
Experimental group
Description:
0.2 mL every 2 hours for 48 hours beginning within 96 hours post-birth, followed by 0.2 mL every 3 hours until 32 weeks post conceptional age
Treatment:
Other: oropharyngeal mother's milk
oropharyngeal sterile water
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
0.2 mL every 2 hours for 48 hours beginning within 96 hours post-birth, followed by 0.2 mL every 3 hours until 32 weeks post conceptional age
Treatment:
Other: oropharyngeal sterile water

Trial contacts and locations

5

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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