Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W4230941898> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W4230941898 abstract "Preterm infants require high protein intake to achieve adequate growth and development. Although breast milk feeding has many benefits for this population, the protein content is highly variable, and inadequate to support rapid infant growth. This is a 2020 update of a Cochrane Review first published in 1999.To determine whether protein-supplemented human milk compared with unsupplemented human milk, fed to preterm infants, improves growth, body composition, cardio-metabolic, and neurodevelopmental outcomes, without significant adverse effects.We used the standard search strategy of Cochrane Neonatal to search Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL 2019, Issue 8) in the Cochrane Library and MEDLINE via PubMed on 23 August 2019. We also searched clinical trials databases and the reference lists of retrieved articles for randomised controlled trials and quasi-randomised trials.Published and unpublished RCTs were eligible if they used random or quasi-random methods to allocate hospitalised preterm infants who were being fed human milk, to additional protein supplementation or no supplementation.Two review authors independently abstracted data, assessed risk of bias and the quality of evidence at the outcome level, using GRADE methodology. We performed meta-analyses, using risk ratio (RR) for dichotomous data, and mean difference (MD) for continuous data, with their respective 95% confidence intervals (CIs). We used a fixed-effect model and had planned to explore potential causes of heterogeneity via subgroup or sensitivity analyses.We included six RCTs, involving 204 preterm infants. The risk of bias for most methodological domains was unclear as there was insufficient detail reported. Low-quality evidence showed that protein supplementation of human milk may increase in-hospital rates of growth in weight (MD 3.82 g/kg/day, 95% CI 2.94 to 4.7; five RCTs, 101 infants; I² = 73%), length (MD 0.12 cm/wk, 95% CI 0.07 to 0.17; four RCTs, 68 infants; I² = 89%), and head circumference (MD 0.06 cm/wk, 95% CI 0.01 to 0.12; four RCTs, 68 infants; I² = 84%). Protein supplementation may lead to longer hospital stays (MD 18.5 days, 95% CI 4.39 to 32.61; one RCT, 20 infants; very low-quality evidence). Very low quality evidence means that the effect of protein supplementation on the risk of feeding intolerance (RR 2.70, 95% CI 0.13 to 58.24; one RCT, 17 infants), or necrotizing enterocolitis (RR 1.11, 95% CI 0.07 to 17.12; one RCT, 76 infants) remains uncertain. No data were available about the effects of protein supplementation on neurodevelopmental outcomes.Low-quality evidence showed that protein supplementation of human milk, fed to preterm infants, increased short-term growth. However, the small sample sizes, low precision, and very low-quality evidence regarding duration of hospital stay, feeding intolerance, and necrotising enterocolitis precluded any conclusions about these outcomes. There were no data on outcomes after hospital discharge. Our findings may not be generalisable to low-resource settings, as none of the included studies were conducted in these settings. Since protein supplementation of human milk is now usually done as a component of multi-nutrient fortifiers, future studies should compare different amounts of protein in multi-component fortifiers, and be designed to determine the effects on duration of hospital stay and safety, as well as on long-term growth, body composition, cardio-metabolic, and neurodevelopmental outcomes." @default.
- W4230941898 created "2022-05-11" @default.
- W4230941898 creator A5018146256 @default.
- W4230941898 creator A5057008392 @default.
- W4230941898 creator A5069145312 @default.
- W4230941898 date "2020-09-23" @default.
- W4230941898 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W4230941898 title "Protein supplementation of human milk for promoting growth in preterm infants" @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1574599210 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1604189074 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1611784458 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W173553849 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1964895345 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1965568750 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1965976655 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1968213691 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1969046054 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1969109218 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1969392227 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1974196792 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1976517175 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1977868554 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1977910874 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1978614075 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1978875704 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1991400193 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2002245825 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2002297053 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2005754624 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2007868628 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2010428517 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2011295727 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2015133489 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2018948366 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2020656332 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2020686017 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2023105428 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2024386915 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2026497815 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2026669160 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2031250363 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2032793335 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2039312260 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2039595811 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2041769816 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2047466098 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2048674900 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2050170802 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2075593674 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2076707218 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2077279859 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2078413523 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2081163000 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2087378645 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2091369188 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2094705332 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2099892635 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2113389023 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2116946530 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2125320499 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2127088775 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2138230630 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2139283595 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2139290446 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2144034820 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2154779389 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2156690881 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2157361349 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2165002339 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2189880526 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2194827374 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2255759106 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2267968871 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2291209154 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2351158211 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W2578638668 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W3084226056 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W4206060025 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W4212888212 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W4235258637 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W4240410450 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W4243675597 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W4298445069 @default.
- W4230941898 cites W1892640333 @default.
- W4230941898 doi "https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.cd000433.pub3" @default.
- W4230941898 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32964431" @default.
- W4230941898 hasPublicationYear "2020" @default.
- W4230941898 type Work @default.
- W4230941898 citedByCount "5" @default.
- W4230941898 countsByYear W42309418982021 @default.
- W4230941898 countsByYear W42309418982022 @default.
- W4230941898 countsByYear W42309418982023 @default.
- W4230941898 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W4230941898 hasAuthorship W4230941898A5018146256 @default.
- W4230941898 hasAuthorship W4230941898A5057008392 @default.
- W4230941898 hasAuthorship W4230941898A5069145312 @default.
- W4230941898 hasBestOaLocation W42309418982 @default.
- W4230941898 hasConcept C126322002 @default.
- W4230941898 hasConcept C168563851 @default.
- W4230941898 hasConcept C187212893 @default.