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Reducing Disparity in Receipt of Mother's Own Milk in Very Low Birth Weight Infants (ReDiMOM)

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Rush

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Pumping, Breast
Infant, Very Low Birth Weight
Milk, Human
Preterm Birth

Treatments

Behavioral: Mother Provides MOM
Behavioral: NICU Acquires MOM

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT04540575
18060410
R01MD013969 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

In the US, the burden of very low birth weight (VLBW; <1500 g) birth is borne disproportionately by black (non-Hispanic black/African American) mothers who are 2.2-2.6 times more likely than nonblack mothers to deliver VLBW infants. This disparity is amplified because black VLBW infants are significantly less likely to receive mother's own milk (MOM) feedings from birth until neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) discharge than nonblack infants, which adds to the lifelong burden of VLBW birth with increased risk of morbidities and greater costs. Pumping is associated with out-of-pocket and opportunity costs that are borne by mothers, unlike donor human milk and formula, which are paid for by NICUs.

This innovative trial will determine the effectiveness of the intervention in reducing the disparity in MOM feedings and provide an economic analysis of the interventions, yielding critical data impacting generalizability and likelihood of implementation of results. The investigators hypothesize that mothers who receive intervention will have greater pumping volume and duration and their infants will be more likely to receive MOM at NICU discharge compared to mothers who receive standard of care lactation care and their infants.

Full description

In the US, the burden of very low birth weight (VLBW; <1500 g) birth is borne disproportionately by black (non-Hispanic black/African American) mothers who are 2.2-2.6 times more likely than nonblack mothers to deliver VLBW infants. This disparity is amplified because black VLBW infants are significantly less likely to receive mother's own milk (MOM) feedings from birth until neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) discharge than nonblack infants, which adds to the lifelong burden of VLBW birth with increased risk of morbidities and greater costs. Even though black mothers of VLBW infants initiate MOM provision at rates similar to nonblack mothers and have similar goals to sustain MOM provision through to NICU discharge, there is a significant disparity in MOM feedings at NICU discharge. Only the mother can mitigate the disparity in MOM feedings at NICU discharge for the VLBW infant by: 1) sustaining breast pump use (6-8 times/day) for the entire NICU hospitalization (average = 73 days), and 2) transporting the MOM that is pumped in the home to the NICU for infant feedings. Pumping is associated with out-of-pocket and opportunity costs that are borne by mothers, unlike donor human milk and formula, which are paid for by NICUs.

The ReDiMOM randomized controlled trial will implement and evaluate an intervention (NICU acquires MOM) developed to offset the aforementioned costs that serve as barriers to sustaining MOM feedings. The intervention includes free hospital-grade electric breast pump, pickup of MOM, and payment for opportunity costs. The intervention will be evaluated in comparison to the current standard of care (mother provides MOM). Data will be collected from several sources including REDCap surveys, data extraction from the electronic medical record and hospital decision support/financial cost accounting system, smart breast pump data and measurement of pumped MOM volume.

This innovative trial will determine the effectiveness of the intervention in reducing the disparity in MOM feedings and provide an economic analysis of the interventions, yielding critical data impacting generalizability and likelihood of implementation of results. The investigators hypothesize that mothers who receive intervention will have greater pumping volume and duration and their infants will be more likely to receive MOM at NICU discharge compared to mothers who receive standard of care lactation care and their infants.

Enrollment

611 estimated patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • MATERNAL: Delivery, or anticipated delivery, of infant with gestational age < 32 0/7 weeks at Rush, age ≥18 years, US citizen or legal resident, fluent in English or Spanish
  • INFANT: Birth gestational age (GA)< 32 0/7 weeks, no significant congenital anomalies or chromosomal defects, <144 hours of age at enrollment, multiples may be included

Exclusion criteria

  • Mothers with health conditions that are incompatible with milk provision per the clinical judgment of the NICU attending caring for the infant, mother is less than 18 years of age, mother has participated in this study with a previous pregnancy, mother is enrolled in another study that impacts lactation, in the neonatologist's opinion the infant is unlikely to survive, or mother is coronavirus (COVID-19) positive and unable to visit the NICU due to quarantine or infection-control requirements during the 144-hour post-delivery randomization window.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

611 participants in 2 patient groups

Mother Provides MOM
Active Comparator group
Description:
Receive Rush NICU standard of care lactation support
Treatment:
Behavioral: Mother Provides MOM
NICU Acquires MOM
Experimental group
Description:
Receive economic interventions in addition to Rush NICU standard of care lactation support
Treatment:
Behavioral: NICU Acquires MOM
Behavioral: Mother Provides MOM

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Aloka L Patel, MD; Tricia J Johnson, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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