The effect of increasing the protein content of human milk fortifier to 1.8 g/100 ml on growth in preterm infants: A randomised controlled trial

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Abstract

The aim of this study was to assess the effect of feeding high protein human milk fortifier (HMF) on growth in preterm infants. In this single-centre randomised trial, 60 infants born 28–32 weeks’ gestation were randomised to receive a higher protein HMF providing 1.8 g protein (n = 31) or standard HMF providing 1 g protein per 100 mL expressed breast milk (EBM) (n = 29). The primary outcome was rate of weight gain. Baseline characteristics were similar between groups. There was no difference between high and standard HMF groups for weight gain (mean difference (MD) −14 g/week; 95% CI −32, 4; p = 0.12), length gain (MD −0.01 cm/week; 95% CI −0.06, 0.03; p = 0.45) or head circumference gain (MD 0.007 cm/week; 95% CI −0.05, 0.06; p = 0.79), despite achieving a 0.7 g/kg/day increase in protein intake in the high protein group. Infants in the high protein group had a higher proportion of lean body mass at trial entry; however, there was no group by time effect on lean mass gains over the study. Increasing HMF protein content to 1.8 g per 100 mL EBM does not improve growth in preterm infants born 28–32 weeks’ gestation.

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Reid, J., Makrides, M., McPhee, A. J., Stark, M. J., Miller, J., & Collins, C. T. (2018). The effect of increasing the protein content of human milk fortifier to 1.8 g/100 ml on growth in preterm infants: A randomised controlled trial. Nutrients, 10(5). https://doi.org/10.3390/nu10050634

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