A Stepwise, Pilot Study of Bovine Colostrum to Supplement the First Enteral Feeding in Preterm Infants (Precolos): Study Protocol and Initial Results

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A Stepwise, Pilot Study of Bovine Colostrum to Supplement the First Enteral Feeding in Preterm Infants (Precolos) : Study Protocol and Initial Results. / Li, Yanqi; Juhl, Sandra M; Ye, Xuqiang; Shen, René L; Iyore, Elisabeth Omolabake; Dai, Yiheng; Sangild, Per T; Greisen, Gorm O.

In: Frontiers in Pediatrics, Vol. 5, 42, 2017.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Li, Y, Juhl, SM, Ye, X, Shen, RL, Iyore, EO, Dai, Y, Sangild, PT & Greisen, GO 2017, 'A Stepwise, Pilot Study of Bovine Colostrum to Supplement the First Enteral Feeding in Preterm Infants (Precolos): Study Protocol and Initial Results', Frontiers in Pediatrics, vol. 5, 42. https://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2017.00042

APA

Li, Y., Juhl, S. M., Ye, X., Shen, R. L., Iyore, E. O., Dai, Y., Sangild, P. T., & Greisen, G. O. (2017). A Stepwise, Pilot Study of Bovine Colostrum to Supplement the First Enteral Feeding in Preterm Infants (Precolos): Study Protocol and Initial Results. Frontiers in Pediatrics, 5, [42]. https://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2017.00042

Vancouver

Li Y, Juhl SM, Ye X, Shen RL, Iyore EO, Dai Y et al. A Stepwise, Pilot Study of Bovine Colostrum to Supplement the First Enteral Feeding in Preterm Infants (Precolos): Study Protocol and Initial Results. Frontiers in Pediatrics. 2017;5. 42. https://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2017.00042

Author

Li, Yanqi ; Juhl, Sandra M ; Ye, Xuqiang ; Shen, René L ; Iyore, Elisabeth Omolabake ; Dai, Yiheng ; Sangild, Per T ; Greisen, Gorm O. / A Stepwise, Pilot Study of Bovine Colostrum to Supplement the First Enteral Feeding in Preterm Infants (Precolos) : Study Protocol and Initial Results. In: Frontiers in Pediatrics. 2017 ; Vol. 5.

Bibtex

@article{317e8e9308ed4c23ad76de4dd71a8bb6,
title = "A Stepwise, Pilot Study of Bovine Colostrum to Supplement the First Enteral Feeding in Preterm Infants (Precolos): Study Protocol and Initial Results",
abstract = "STUDY PROTOCOL: The optimal feeding for preterm infants during the first weeks is still debated, especially when mother's own milk is lacking or limited. Intact bovine colostrum (BC) contains high amounts of protein, growth factors, and immuno-regulatory components that may benefit protein intake and gut maturation. We designed a pilot study to investigate the feasibility and tolerability of BC as the first nutrition for preterm infants. The study was designed into three phases (A, B, and C) and recruited infants with birth weights of 1,000-1,800 g (China) or gestational ages (GAs) of 27 + 0 to 32 + 6 weeks (Denmark). In phase A, three infants were recruited consecutively to receive BC as a supplement to standard feeding. In phase B, seven infants were recruited in parallel. In phase C (not yet complete), 40 infants will be randomized to BC or standard feeding. Feeding intolerance, growth, time to full enteral feeding, serious infections/NEC, plasma amino acid profile, blood biochemistry, and intestinal functions are assessed. This paper presents the study protocol and results from phases A and B.RESULTS: Seven Danish and five Chinese infants received 22 ± 11 and 22 ± 6 ml·kg-1·day-1 BC for a mean of 7 ± 3 and 7 ± 1 days which provided 1.81 ± 0.89 and 1.83 ± 0.52 g·kg-1·day-1 protein, respectively. Growth rates until 37 weeks or discharge were in the normal range (11.8 ± 0.9 and 12.9 ± 2.7 g·kg-1·day-1 in Denmark and China, respectively). No clinical adverse effects were observed. Five infants showed a transient hypertyrosinemia on day 7 of life.DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: The three-phased study design was used to proceed with caution as this is the first trial to investigate intact BC as the first feed for preterm infants. BC supplementation appeared well tolerated and resulted in high enteral protein intake. Based on the safety evaluation of phases A and B, the randomized phase C has been initiated. When complete, the Precolos trial will document whether it is feasible to use BC as a novel, bioactive milk diet for preterm infants. Our trial paves the way for a larger randomized controlled trial on using BC as the first feed for preterm infants with insufficient access to mother's own milk.",
author = "Yanqi Li and Juhl, {Sandra M} and Xuqiang Ye and Shen, {Ren{\'e} L} and Iyore, {Elisabeth Omolabake} and Yiheng Dai and Sangild, {Per T} and Greisen, {Gorm O}",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.3389/fped.2017.00042",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
journal = "Frontiers in Pediatrics",
issn = "2296-2360",
publisher = "Frontiers Media",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A Stepwise, Pilot Study of Bovine Colostrum to Supplement the First Enteral Feeding in Preterm Infants (Precolos)

T2 - Study Protocol and Initial Results

AU - Li, Yanqi

AU - Juhl, Sandra M

AU - Ye, Xuqiang

AU - Shen, René L

AU - Iyore, Elisabeth Omolabake

AU - Dai, Yiheng

AU - Sangild, Per T

AU - Greisen, Gorm O

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - STUDY PROTOCOL: The optimal feeding for preterm infants during the first weeks is still debated, especially when mother's own milk is lacking or limited. Intact bovine colostrum (BC) contains high amounts of protein, growth factors, and immuno-regulatory components that may benefit protein intake and gut maturation. We designed a pilot study to investigate the feasibility and tolerability of BC as the first nutrition for preterm infants. The study was designed into three phases (A, B, and C) and recruited infants with birth weights of 1,000-1,800 g (China) or gestational ages (GAs) of 27 + 0 to 32 + 6 weeks (Denmark). In phase A, three infants were recruited consecutively to receive BC as a supplement to standard feeding. In phase B, seven infants were recruited in parallel. In phase C (not yet complete), 40 infants will be randomized to BC or standard feeding. Feeding intolerance, growth, time to full enteral feeding, serious infections/NEC, plasma amino acid profile, blood biochemistry, and intestinal functions are assessed. This paper presents the study protocol and results from phases A and B.RESULTS: Seven Danish and five Chinese infants received 22 ± 11 and 22 ± 6 ml·kg-1·day-1 BC for a mean of 7 ± 3 and 7 ± 1 days which provided 1.81 ± 0.89 and 1.83 ± 0.52 g·kg-1·day-1 protein, respectively. Growth rates until 37 weeks or discharge were in the normal range (11.8 ± 0.9 and 12.9 ± 2.7 g·kg-1·day-1 in Denmark and China, respectively). No clinical adverse effects were observed. Five infants showed a transient hypertyrosinemia on day 7 of life.DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: The three-phased study design was used to proceed with caution as this is the first trial to investigate intact BC as the first feed for preterm infants. BC supplementation appeared well tolerated and resulted in high enteral protein intake. Based on the safety evaluation of phases A and B, the randomized phase C has been initiated. When complete, the Precolos trial will document whether it is feasible to use BC as a novel, bioactive milk diet for preterm infants. Our trial paves the way for a larger randomized controlled trial on using BC as the first feed for preterm infants with insufficient access to mother's own milk.

AB - STUDY PROTOCOL: The optimal feeding for preterm infants during the first weeks is still debated, especially when mother's own milk is lacking or limited. Intact bovine colostrum (BC) contains high amounts of protein, growth factors, and immuno-regulatory components that may benefit protein intake and gut maturation. We designed a pilot study to investigate the feasibility and tolerability of BC as the first nutrition for preterm infants. The study was designed into three phases (A, B, and C) and recruited infants with birth weights of 1,000-1,800 g (China) or gestational ages (GAs) of 27 + 0 to 32 + 6 weeks (Denmark). In phase A, three infants were recruited consecutively to receive BC as a supplement to standard feeding. In phase B, seven infants were recruited in parallel. In phase C (not yet complete), 40 infants will be randomized to BC or standard feeding. Feeding intolerance, growth, time to full enteral feeding, serious infections/NEC, plasma amino acid profile, blood biochemistry, and intestinal functions are assessed. This paper presents the study protocol and results from phases A and B.RESULTS: Seven Danish and five Chinese infants received 22 ± 11 and 22 ± 6 ml·kg-1·day-1 BC for a mean of 7 ± 3 and 7 ± 1 days which provided 1.81 ± 0.89 and 1.83 ± 0.52 g·kg-1·day-1 protein, respectively. Growth rates until 37 weeks or discharge were in the normal range (11.8 ± 0.9 and 12.9 ± 2.7 g·kg-1·day-1 in Denmark and China, respectively). No clinical adverse effects were observed. Five infants showed a transient hypertyrosinemia on day 7 of life.DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: The three-phased study design was used to proceed with caution as this is the first trial to investigate intact BC as the first feed for preterm infants. BC supplementation appeared well tolerated and resulted in high enteral protein intake. Based on the safety evaluation of phases A and B, the randomized phase C has been initiated. When complete, the Precolos trial will document whether it is feasible to use BC as a novel, bioactive milk diet for preterm infants. Our trial paves the way for a larger randomized controlled trial on using BC as the first feed for preterm infants with insufficient access to mother's own milk.

U2 - 10.3389/fped.2017.00042

DO - 10.3389/fped.2017.00042

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28316968

VL - 5

JO - Frontiers in Pediatrics

JF - Frontiers in Pediatrics

SN - 2296-2360

M1 - 42

ER -

ID: 196344472