Diet, weight gain, and head growth in hospitalized US very preterm infants: a 10-year observational study

Author:

Belfort Mandy B1,Edwards Erika M23ORCID,Greenberg Lucy T2ORCID,Parker Margaret G4,Ehret Danielle Y23ORCID,Horbar Jeffrey D23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatric Newborn Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA

2. Vermont Oxford Network, Burlington, VT

3. Larner College of Medicine, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT

4. Department of Pediatrics, Boston Medical Center, Boston, MA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background The benefits of human milk for hospitalized preterm infants are well documented, but the extent to which current human milk diets adequately support growth is uncertain. Objectives 1) To quantify differences in weight gain and head growth between very preterm infants fed human milk compared with infant formula; and 2) to describe trends in the magnitude of these differences over time Methods We studied infants from 777 US NICUs in the Vermont Oxford Network database. We included all surviving infants 23–29 weeks of gestation or 401–1500 g birth weight (maximum gestational age 32 wk) and excluded infants discharged >42 weeks of gestation or with congenital anomalies. In diet-growth analyses, we included infants born 2012–2016 (n = 138,703) to reflect current practice. In trend analyses, we included a 10-y cohort (n = 263,367). We categorized diet at NICU discharge/transfer as: 1) human milk only (no formula or fortifier); 2) human milk with formula or fortifier (mixed); or 3) infant formula only. Outcomes were weight and head circumference z-score change from birth to discharge relative to a fetal reference. Results Diet at discharge/transfer was human milk only for 18,274 (6.6%), mixed for 121,621 (44%), and formula only for 137,067 (49%). Weight deviated more from the fetal reference for infants fed both human milk diets compared with formula only (weight z-score change for infants fed human milk only, −0.88; mixed, −0.82; formula only −0.80; P < 0.0001 for diet overall). There were also differences by diet in head z-score change (human milk only, −0.52; mixed, −0.49; formula only, −0.45; P < 0.0001 for diet overall). The magnitude of these differences has diminished substantially over 10 y. Conclusions Very preterm infants receiving human milk compared with infant formula diets have a slower weight gain and head growth at hospital discharge.

Funder

Vermont Oxford Network

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Nutrition and Dietetics,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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