Freeze-Dried Donor Milk for Fortification of Mother’s Own Milk in Preterm Infants: A Preliminary Observational Study
Niels Rochow, Gisela Adrienne Weiss, Katja Knab, Isabell Prothmann, Stefan Schäfer, Jasper L. Zimmermann, Anastasia Meis, Stefanie Lohmüller-Weiß, Kerstin Simon, Simone Schäfer, Julia Welsch, Christoph Fusch

TL;DR
Freeze-dried donor milk can safely supplement preterm infants' mother's milk without causing growth issues or complications.
Contribution
Demonstrates safety and efficacy of freeze-dried donor milk fortifiers in preterm infants compared to bovine-based alternatives.
Findings
No serious adverse events or necrotizing enterocolitis occurred with freeze-dried donor milk fortification.
Anthropometric outcomes were comparable between freeze-dried donor milk and bovine protein-based fortification.
Feeding tolerance was excellent across over 3,100 feedings in preterm infants ≥30 weeks gestational age.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Freeze-dried high-temperature short-time pasteurized human milk fortifiers offer potential for exclusive human milk feeding in preterm infants while providing necessary nutritional supplementation. However, clinical data on safety, tolerability, and growth outcomes remain limited. This study evaluated donor milk fortification compared to conventional bovine protein-based fortification. Methods: We conducted a prospective non-interventional observational cohort study with a retrospectively matched comparison cohort at University Children’s Hospital of Nuremberg. Preterm infants ≥ 30 weeks gestational age requiring mother’s own milk fortification were included. The exposed cohort (n = 32) received freeze-dried high-temperature short-time pasteurized donor milk fortifier at 1.6–4.8 g/100 mL of mother’s own milk; the matched comparison cohort (n = 32) received bovine…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfant Nutrition and Health · Breastfeeding Practices and Influences · Neonatal Respiratory Health Research
