Mixed Milk Feeding Patterns and Growth Outcomes During the First Year of Life in Asian Infants: Application of Predefined Feeding Clusters to Test Associations
Liandre Frances van der Merwe, Kelly A Mulder, Floor M van Oudenhoven, Lynette P Shek, Oon Hoe Teoh, Wei Wei Pang

TL;DR
This study examines how different mixed milk feeding patterns affect infant growth in Asian babies during their first year of life.
Contribution
A new clustering approach is applied to mixed milk feeding patterns to better understand their association with infant growth.
Findings
Feeding clusters explained significant variation in growth trajectories beyond standard covariates.
More breastfeeding in a cluster led to growth patterns closer to the breastfed reference group.
All clusters showed adequate growth within WHO standards for weight-for-age z-scores.
Abstract
Varying definitions have been used to categorize mixed milk feeding (MMF) patterns in studies focused on feeding and infant growth, posing a challenge when making comparisons and interpretations. Furthermore, MMF encompasses vastly heterogeneous and evolving feeding behaviors that are difficult to standardize longitudinally. We previously described a new approach for describing MMF patterns across the first year, using a multivariate clustering algorithm. In the current article, we aimed to describe the associated infant growth patterns across these identified feeding clusters in an Asian clinical study (N = 539). Using a linear mixed-effects model that included infant covariates, we estimated the associations between the different feeding clusters and longitudinal growth outcomes, including weight, length and BMI-for-age z-scores. The cluster division explained a statistically…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBreastfeeding Practices and Influences · Child Nutrition and Feeding Issues · Child Nutrition and Water Access
