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Neurodevelopmental outcomes of healthy Chinese term infants fed infant formula enriched in bovine milk fat globule membrane for 12 months - A randomized controlled trial.

Yong Xia, BoWen Jiang, LiHong Zhou, JuFei Ma, Luyi Yang, Fangyun Wang, Huibing Liu, Nai Zhang, Xiaoxia Li, Peter Petocz, Bing Wang

2021PubMed28 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Human milk fat globule membrane (MFGM) has multifunctional health benefits. We evaluated neurodevelopment and growth of healthy term infants fed bovine milk-derived MFGM-enriched formula (MF) over 12 months. METHODS AND STUDY DESIGN: A prospective, multi-center, double-blind, randomized trial was conducted in Fuzhou, China. Healthy term infants (n=212), aged <14 days, were assigned randomly to be fed MF or a standard formula (SF) for 6 months and then switched to stage 2 MF and SF formula until 12 months. A reference group (n=206) contained healthy breastfed infants (BFR). Neurodevelopment was assessed with Bayley-III Scales. RESULTS: At 12 months, the composite social emotional (+3.5) and general adaptive behaviour (+5.62) scores were significantly higher in MF than SF (95% CIs 0.03 to 6.79 and 1.78 to 9.38; p=0.048 and 0.004, respectively). Mean cognitive (+2.86, 95% CIs -1.10 to 6.80, p=0.08), language (+0.39, 95% CIs -2.53 to 3.30, p=0.87) and motor (+0.90, 95% CIs -2.32 to 4.13, p=0.49) scores tended to be higher in MF than SF, but the differences between the two groups were not significant. BFR scored higher on Bayley-III than either MF or SF at 6 and 12 months. Cognitive scores were significantly higher in BFR than SF (95% CI 0.05 to 7.20; p=0.045), but not MF (p=0.74) at 6 months. Short-term memory was significantly higher in MF than SF at 12 months (95% CI 1.40 to 12.33; p=0.002). At 4 months, serum gangliosides were significantly higher in MF and BFR than SF (95% CI 0.64 to 13.02; p=0.025). Milk intake, linear growth, body mass and head circumference were not significantly different between formula-fed groups. CONCLUSIONS: MFGM supplementation in early life supports adequate growth, increased serum gangliosides concentration and improves some measures of cognitive development in Chinese infants.

Topics & Concepts

Infant formulaBovine milkMedicineRandomized controlled trialTerm (time)Globules of fatPediatricsFood scienceAnimal scienceMilk fatChemistryBiologyInternal medicinePhysicsQuantum mechanicsLinseed oilBreastfeeding Practices and InfluencesInfant Development and Preterm CareInfant Nutrition and Health