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. 2017 Mar 18;9(3):302.
doi: 10.3390/nu9030302.

Lactational Stage of Pasteurized Human Donor Milk Contributes to Nutrient Limitations for Infants

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Lactational Stage of Pasteurized Human Donor Milk Contributes to Nutrient Limitations for Infants

Christina J Valentine et al. Nutrients. .

Abstract

Background: Mother's own milk is the first choice for feeding preterm infants, but when not available, pasteurized human donor milk (PDM) is often used. Infants fed PDM have difficulties maintaining appropriate growth velocities. To assess the most basic elements of nutrition, we tested the hypotheses that fatty acid and amino acid composition of PDM is highly variable and standard pooling practices attenuate variability; however, total nutrients may be limiting without supplementation due to late lactational stage of the milk.

Methods: A prospective cross-sectional sampling of milk was obtained from five donor milk banks located in Ohio, Michigan, Colorado, Texas-Ft Worth, and California. Milk samples were collected after Institutional Review Board (#07-0035) approval and informed consent. Fatty acid and amino acid contents were measured in milk from individual donors and donor pools (pooled per Human Milk Banking Association of North America guidelines). Statistical comparisons were performed using Kruskal-Wallis, Spearman's, or Multivariate Regression analyses with center as the fixed factor and lactational stage as co-variate.

Results: Ten of the fourteen fatty acids and seventeen of the nineteen amino acids analyzed differed across Banks in the individual milk samples. Pooling minimized these differences in amino acid and fatty acid contents. Concentrations of lysine and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) were not different across Banks, but concentrations were low compared to recommended levels.

Conclusions: Individual donor milk fatty acid and amino acid contents are highly variable. Standardized pooling practice reduces this variability. Lysine and DHA concentrations were consistently low across geographic regions in North America due to lactational stage of the milk, and thus not adequately addressed by pooling. Targeted supplementation is needed to optimize PDM, especially for the preterm or volume restricted infant.

Keywords: DHA; donor milk; human milk; lysine; nutrition; preterm infants.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have no conflict of interest. Dr. Valentine is currently an Associate Professor at The University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati Ohio and Medical Director of Mead Johnson Nutrition, Evansville, IN, USA.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Fatty acid levels in pasteurized donor milk samples. The individual variability of linoleic acid, linolenic acid, arachidonic acid, and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) were calculated as mg/kg/day, assuming 150 mL per day and a 1 kg infant. Individuals within each Bank are represented by the small symbols. The boxes represent the median and range for the pooled samples. Data are representative of 15–16 amino acids; analyses in individual milk samples revealed that all but two of the measured amino acids were different across Banks—these were taurine and tryptophan (Figure 2 and Table S2). Once samples were pooled, no statistical differences in amino acid contents across Banks were indicated (Table 3).
Figure 2
Figure 2
Amino acid levels in pasteurized donor milk samples. The individual variability of arginine, leucine, methionine, and lysine were calculated as mg/kg/day, assuming 150 mL per day and a 1 kg infant. Individuals within each Bank are represented by the small symbols. The boxes represent the median and range for the pooled samples. Data are representative of 15–16 individual samples and five pooled samples per Bank.

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