Growth of Infants Fed Formula with Evolving Nutrition Composition: A Single‐Arm Non‐Inferiority Study
The nutritional composition of human milk evolves over the course of lactation, to match the changing needs of infants. This single‐arm, non‐inferiority study evaluated growth against the WHO standards in the first year of life, in infants consecutively fed four age‐based formulas with compositions...
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doaj-41aebecb585f4ecaabeea3f7abc9bff82020-11-25T02:48:02ZengMDPI AGNutrients2072-66432017-03-019321910.3390/nu9030219nu9030219Growth of Infants Fed Formula with Evolving Nutrition Composition: A Single‐Arm Non‐Inferiority StudyJohannes Spalinger0Andreas Nydegger1Dominique Belli2Raoul I. Furlano3Jian Yan4Jerome Tanguy5Sophie Pecquet6Frédéric Destaillats7Delphine Egli8Philippe Steenhout9Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Children’s Hospital, CH‐6000 Lucerne, SwitzerlandDepartment of Pediatric Gastroenterology, University Children’s Hospital, CH‐1011 Lausanne, SwitzerlandDepartment of Pediatrics, University Hospital of Geneva, CH‐1205 Geneva, SwitzerlandDepartment of Pediatrics, University Children’s Hospital Basel (UKBB), CH‐4031 Basel, SwitzerlandNestlé Nutrition Research, King of Prussia, PA 19406, USANestlé Research Center, CH‐1000 Lausanne, SwitzerlandNestlé Nutrition Research, CH‐1800 Vevey, SwitzerlandNestlé Product Technology Center, CH‐1800 Vevey, SwitzerlandNestlé Nutrition Medical, Scientific and Regulatory affairs Unit, CH‐1800 Vevey, SwitzerlandNestlé Health Science, CH‐1800 Vevey, SwitzerlandThe nutritional composition of human milk evolves over the course of lactation, to match the changing needs of infants. This single‐arm, non‐inferiority study evaluated growth against the WHO standards in the first year of life, in infants consecutively fed four age‐based formulas with compositions tailored to infants’ nutritional needs during the 1st, 2nd, 3rd–6th, and 7th–12th months of age. Healthy full‐term formula‐fed infants (n = 32) were enrolled at ≤14 days of age and exclusively fed study formulas from enrollment, to the age of four months. Powdered study formulas were provided in single‐serving capsules that were reconstituted using a dedicated automated preparation system, to ensure precise, hygienic preparation. The primary outcome was the weight‐for‐age z‐score (WAZ) at the age of four months (vs. non‐inferiority margin of −0.5 SD). Mean (95% CI) z‐scores for the WAZ (0.12 (−0.15, 0.39)), as well as for the length‐for‐age (0.05 (−0.19, 0.30)), weight‐for‐length (0.16 (−0.16, 0.48)), BMI‐for‐age (0.11 (−0.20, 0.43)), and head circumferencefor‐age (0.41 (0.16, 0.65)) at the age of four months, were non‐inferior. Throughout the study, anthropometric z‐scores tracked closely against the WHO standards (within ±1 SD). In sum, a fourstage, age‐based infant formula system with nutritional compositions tailored to infants’ evolving needs, supports healthy growth consistent with WHO standards, for the first year of life.http://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/9/3/219human milk evolving nutritional composition infant formula protein staged‐formula delivery system WHO growth standard personalized nutrition |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Johannes Spalinger Andreas Nydegger Dominique Belli Raoul I. Furlano Jian Yan Jerome Tanguy Sophie Pecquet Frédéric Destaillats Delphine Egli Philippe Steenhout |
spellingShingle |
Johannes Spalinger Andreas Nydegger Dominique Belli Raoul I. Furlano Jian Yan Jerome Tanguy Sophie Pecquet Frédéric Destaillats Delphine Egli Philippe Steenhout Growth of Infants Fed Formula with Evolving Nutrition Composition: A Single‐Arm Non‐Inferiority Study Nutrients human milk evolving nutritional composition infant formula protein staged‐formula delivery system WHO growth standard personalized nutrition |
author_facet |
Johannes Spalinger Andreas Nydegger Dominique Belli Raoul I. Furlano Jian Yan Jerome Tanguy Sophie Pecquet Frédéric Destaillats Delphine Egli Philippe Steenhout |
author_sort |
Johannes Spalinger |
title |
Growth of Infants Fed Formula with Evolving Nutrition Composition: A Single‐Arm Non‐Inferiority Study |
title_short |
Growth of Infants Fed Formula with Evolving Nutrition Composition: A Single‐Arm Non‐Inferiority Study |
title_full |
Growth of Infants Fed Formula with Evolving Nutrition Composition: A Single‐Arm Non‐Inferiority Study |
title_fullStr |
Growth of Infants Fed Formula with Evolving Nutrition Composition: A Single‐Arm Non‐Inferiority Study |
title_full_unstemmed |
Growth of Infants Fed Formula with Evolving Nutrition Composition: A Single‐Arm Non‐Inferiority Study |
title_sort |
growth of infants fed formula with evolving nutrition composition: a single‐arm non‐inferiority study |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Nutrients |
issn |
2072-6643 |
publishDate |
2017-03-01 |
description |
The nutritional composition of human milk evolves over the course of lactation, to match the changing needs of infants. This single‐arm, non‐inferiority study evaluated growth against the WHO standards in the first year of life, in infants consecutively fed four age‐based formulas with compositions tailored to infants’ nutritional needs during the 1st, 2nd, 3rd–6th, and 7th–12th months of age. Healthy full‐term formula‐fed infants (n = 32) were enrolled at ≤14 days of age and exclusively fed study formulas from enrollment, to the age of four months. Powdered study formulas were provided in single‐serving capsules that were reconstituted using a dedicated automated preparation system, to ensure precise, hygienic preparation. The primary outcome was the weight‐for‐age z‐score (WAZ) at the age of four months (vs. non‐inferiority margin of −0.5 SD). Mean (95% CI) z‐scores for the WAZ (0.12 (−0.15, 0.39)), as well as for the length‐for‐age (0.05 (−0.19, 0.30)), weight‐for‐length (0.16 (−0.16, 0.48)), BMI‐for‐age (0.11 (−0.20, 0.43)), and head circumferencefor‐age (0.41 (0.16, 0.65)) at the age of four months, were non‐inferior. Throughout the study, anthropometric z‐scores tracked closely against the WHO standards (within ±1 SD). In sum, a fourstage, age‐based infant formula system with nutritional compositions tailored to infants’ evolving needs, supports healthy growth consistent with WHO standards, for the first year of life. |
topic |
human milk evolving nutritional composition infant formula protein staged‐formula delivery system WHO growth standard personalized nutrition |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/9/3/219 |
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