Forster Della A, Jacobs Susan, Amir Lisa H, Davis Peter, Walker Susan P, McEgan Kerri, Opie Gillian, Donath Susan M, Moorhead Anita M, Ford Rachael, McNamara Catharine, Aylward Amanda, Gold Lisa
Judith Lumley Centre (formerly Mother & Child Health Research), La Trobe University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Royal Women's Hospital, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
BMJ Open. 2014 Oct 30;4(10):e006571. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-006571.
Many maternity providers recommend that women with diabetes in pregnancy express and store breast milk in late pregnancy so breast milk is available after birth, given (1) infants of these women are at increased risk of hypoglycaemia in the first 24 h of life; and (2) the delay in lactogenesis II compared with women without diabetes that increases their infant's risk of receiving infant formula. The Diabetes and Antenatal Milk Expressing (DAME) trial will establish whether advising women with diabetes in pregnancy (pre-existing or gestational) to express breast milk from 36 weeks gestation increases the proportion of infants who require admission to special or neonatal intensive care units (SCN/NICU) compared with infants of women receiving standard care. Secondary outcomes include birth gestation, breastfeeding outcomes and economic impact.
Women will be recruited from 34 weeks gestation to a multicentre, two arm, unblinded randomised controlled trial. The intervention starts at 36 weeks. Randomisation will be stratified by site, parity and diabetes type. Women allocated to the intervention will be taught expressing and encouraged to hand express twice daily for 10 min and keep an expressing diary. The sample size of 658 (329 per group) will detect a 10% difference in proportion of babies admitted to SCN/NICU (85% power, α 0.05). Data are collected at recruitment (structured questionnaire), after birth (abstracted from medical record blinded to group), and 2 and 12 weeks postpartum (telephone interview).
the intervention group will be compared with the standard care group by intention to treat analysis, and the primary outcome compared using χ(2) and ORs.
Research ethics approval will be obtained from participating sites. Results will be published in peer-reviewed journals and presented to clinicians, policymakers and study participants.
Australian Controlled Trials Register ACTRN12611000217909.
许多产科医护人员建议妊娠糖尿病女性在妊娠晚期挤出并储存母乳,以便产后能有母乳可用,原因如下:(1)这些女性的婴儿在出生后24小时内发生低血糖的风险增加;(2)与非糖尿病女性相比,她们的泌乳二期延迟,这增加了其婴儿接受婴儿配方奶粉的风险。糖尿病与产前挤奶(DAME)试验将确定,建议妊娠糖尿病(孕前或孕期糖尿病)女性从妊娠36周开始挤奶,与接受标准护理的女性的婴儿相比,是否会增加需要入住特殊护理或新生儿重症监护病房(SCN/NICU)的婴儿比例。次要结局包括出生孕周、母乳喂养结局和经济影响。
将从妊娠34周开始招募女性参与一项多中心、双臂、非盲随机对照试验。干预从妊娠36周开始。随机分组将按地点、产次和糖尿病类型进行分层。分配到干预组的女性将学习挤奶方法,并被鼓励每天手动挤奶两次,每次10分钟,并记录挤奶日记。658例(每组329例)的样本量将能检测出入住SCN/NICU的婴儿比例有10%的差异(检验效能85%,α=0.05)。在招募时(通过结构化问卷)、出生后(从对分组不知情的病历中提取)以及产后2周和12周(电话访谈)收集数据。
干预组将与标准护理组进行意向性分析比较,主要结局使用χ²检验和比值比进行比较。
将获得参与研究地点的研究伦理批准。研究结果将发表在同行评审期刊上,并向临床医生、政策制定者和研究参与者公布。
澳大利亚临床试验注册中心ACTRN12611000217909。