Neurodevelopmental Outcomes Among Infants Born Preterm Fed With Mother's Own Milk: A Comparison of Singletons and Twins

Michal Yackobovitch-Gavan*, Sarit Atia Shmueli, Iris Morag

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: To examine associations between early exposure to mother's own milk (MOM) and neurodevelopmental outcomes among preterm infants, and to compare these associations between singletons and twins. Study design: Retrospective cohort study that included low-risk infants born at <32 weeks gestational age. Nutrition was documented over a 3-day period at mean ages of 14 and 28 days of life; an average of the 3 days was calculated. The Griffiths Mental Development Scales (GMDS) were administered at 12 months corrected age. Results: Preterm infants (n = 131) with median gestational age of 30.6 weeks were included; 56 (42.7%) were singletons. On days 14 and 28 of life, 80.9% and 77.1% were exposed to MOM, respectively. Exposure rate was comparable, but MOM intake (mL/kg/day) was higher among singletons than among twins (P <.05). At both time points, MOM-exposed infants scored higher on personal-social, hearing-language, and total GMDS assessments than nonexposed infants. These differences were significant for the entire cohort and for twins (P <.05). MOM intake correlated with total GMDS score for both singletons and twins. Any exposure to MOM was associated with additional 6-7 points on total GMDS score or 2-3 additional points for every 50 mL/kg/day of MOM. Conclusions: The study supports the positive association between early MOM exposure among low-risk preterm infants and neurodevelopmental outcomes at 12 months corrected age. The differential effects of MOM exposure on singletons vs twins need further exploration.

Original languageEnglish
Article number113484
JournalJournal of Pediatrics
Volume259
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2023

Keywords

  • Griffith Mental Development Scales
  • developmental outcomes
  • human milk
  • premature infants
  • retrospective cohort study

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Neurodevelopmental Outcomes Among Infants Born Preterm Fed With Mother's Own Milk: A Comparison of Singletons and Twins'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this