Liggins Institute, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2024 May 9;5(5):CD013038. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD013038.pub3.
Preterm infants (born before 37 weeks' gestation) are often unable to co-ordinate sucking, swallowing, and breathing for oral feeding because of their immaturity. In such cases, initial nutrition is provided by orogastric or nasogastric tube feeding. Feeding intolerance is common and can delay attainment of full enteral and sucking feeds, prolonging the need for nutritional support and the hospital stay. Smell and taste play an important role in the activation of physiological pre-absorptive processes that contribute to food digestion and absorption. However, during tube feeding, milk bypasses the nasal and oral cavities, limiting exposure to the smell and taste of milk. Provision of the smell and taste of milk with tube feeds offers a non-invasive and low-cost intervention that, if effective in accelerating the transition to enteral feeds and subsequently to sucking feeds, would bring considerable advantages to infants, their families, and healthcare systems.
To assess whether exposure to the smell or taste (or both) of breastmilk or formula administered with tube feeds can accelerate the transition to full sucking feeds without adverse effects in preterm infants.
We conducted searches in CENTRAL, MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, and Epistemonikos to 26 April 2023. We also searched clinical trial databases and conference proceedings.
We included randomised and quasi-randomised studies that evaluated exposure versus no exposure to the smell or taste of milk (or both) immediately before or at the time of tube feeds.
Two review authors independently selected studies, assessed risk of bias, and extracted data according to Cochrane Neonatal methodology. We performed meta-analyses using risk ratios (RRs) for dichotomous data and mean differences (MDs) for continuous data, with their respective 95% confidence intervals (CIs). We used GRADE to assess the certainty of evidence.
We included eight studies (1277 preterm infants). Seven studies (1244 infants) contributed data for meta-analysis. The evidence suggests that exposure to the smell and taste of milk with tube feeds has little to no effect on time taken to reach full sucking feeds (MD -1.07 days, 95% CI -2.63 to 0.50; 3 studies, 662 infants; very low-certainty evidence). Two studies reported no adverse effects related to the intervention. The intervention may have little to no effect on duration of parenteral nutrition (MD 0.23 days, 95% CI -0.24 to 0.71; 3 studies, 977 infants; low-certainty evidence), time to reach full enteral feeds (MD -0.16 days, 95% CI -0.45 to 0.12; 1 study, 736 infants; very low-certainty evidence) or risk of necrotising enterocolitis (RR 0.93, 95% CI 0.47 to 1.84; 2 studies, 435 infants; low-certainty evidence), although the evidence for time to reach full enteral feeds is very uncertain. Exposure to the smell and taste of milk with tube feeds probably has little to no effect on risk of late infection (RR 1.14, 95% CI 0.74 to 1.75; 2 studies, 436 infants; moderate-certainty evidence). There were no data available to assess feeding intolerance. The included studies had small sample sizes and methodological limitations, including unclear or lack of randomisation (four studies), lack of blinding of participants and personnel (five studies), unclear or lack of blinding of the outcome assessor (all eight studies), and different inclusion criteria and methods of administering the interventions.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The results of our meta-analyses suggest that exposure to the smell and taste of milk with tube feeds may have little to no effect on time to reach full sucking feeds and time to reach full enteral feeds. We found no clear difference between exposure and no exposure to the smell or taste of milk on safety outcomes (adverse effects, necrotising enterocolitis, and late infection). Results from one ongoing study and two studies awaiting classification may alter the conclusions of this review. Future research should examine the effect of exposing preterm infants to the smell and taste of milk with tube feeds on health outcomes during hospitalisation, such as attainment of feeding skills, safety, feed tolerance, infection, and growth. Future studies should be powered to detect the effect of the intervention in infants of different gestational ages and on each sex separately. It is also important to determine the optimal method, frequency, and duration of exposure.
早产儿(胎龄不足 37 周)由于不成熟,通常无法协调吸吮、吞咽和呼吸进行口服喂养。在这种情况下,最初的营养是通过经口或经鼻胃管喂养提供的。喂养不耐受很常见,会延迟达到完全肠内喂养和吸吮喂养的时间,延长营养支持和住院时间。气味和味道在促进生理预吸收过程中起着重要作用,这些过程有助于食物消化和吸收。然而,在管饲喂养期间,牛奶绕过鼻腔和口腔,限制了对牛奶气味和味道的接触。通过管饲提供牛奶的气味和味道是一种非侵入性且低成本的干预措施,如果能有效加速向肠内喂养和随后的吸吮喂养过渡,将给婴儿、他们的家庭和医疗保健系统带来巨大的优势。
评估早产儿在管饲喂养时接触母乳或配方奶的气味或味道(或两者都接触)是否可以加速向完全吸吮喂养的过渡,而不会产生不良影响。
我们检索了 CENTRAL、MEDLINE、Embase、CINAHL 和 Epistemonikos,截至 2023 年 4 月 26 日。我们还检索了临床试验数据库和会议记录。
我们纳入了随机和半随机研究,这些研究评估了在管饲喂养前或同时接触母乳或配方奶的气味或味道(或两者都接触)与不接触的效果。
两名综述作者独立选择研究、评估偏倚风险,并根据 Cochrane 新生儿方法提取数据。我们使用风险比(RR)进行二分类数据的荟萃分析,使用均数差(MD)进行连续数据的荟萃分析,并分别给出各自的 95%置信区间(CI)。我们使用 GRADE 评估证据的确定性。
我们纳入了八项研究(1277 名早产儿)。七项研究(662 名婴儿)提供了用于荟萃分析的数据。证据表明,管饲喂养时接触母乳或配方奶的气味和味道对达到完全吸吮喂养的时间几乎没有影响(MD -1.07 天,95%CI -2.63 至 0.50;3 项研究,662 名婴儿;极低确定性证据)。两项研究报告了与干预相关的不良影响。该干预措施可能对肠外营养的持续时间几乎没有影响(MD 0.23 天,95%CI -0.24 至 0.71;3 项研究,977 名婴儿;低确定性证据),达到完全肠内喂养的时间(MD -0.16 天,95%CI -0.45 至 0.12;1 项研究,736 名婴儿;极低确定性证据)或坏死性小肠结肠炎的风险(RR 0.93,95%CI 0.47 至 1.84;2 项研究,435 名婴儿;低确定性证据),尽管达到完全肠内喂养的时间证据非常不确定。管饲喂养时接触母乳或配方奶的气味和味道可能对迟发性感染的风险几乎没有影响(RR 1.14,95%CI 0.74 至 1.75;2 项研究,436 名婴儿;中等确定性证据)。没有数据可用于评估喂养不耐受。纳入的研究样本量小,方法学上存在局限性,包括随机分组不明确或缺乏(四项研究)、参与者和人员的盲法不明确或缺乏(五项研究)、结局评估者的盲法不明确或缺乏(八项研究),以及不同的纳入标准和干预措施的实施方法。
我们的荟萃分析结果表明,早产儿在管饲喂养时接触母乳或配方奶的气味和味道可能对达到完全吸吮喂养的时间和达到完全肠内喂养的时间几乎没有影响。我们没有发现接触或不接触牛奶的气味或味道在不良影响、坏死性小肠结肠炎和迟发性感染等安全性结局上有明显差异。一项正在进行的研究和两项等待分类的研究的结果可能会改变本综述的结论。未来的研究应该评估在住院期间暴露早产儿于母乳或配方奶的气味和味道对健康结局的影响,例如获得喂养技能、安全性、喂养耐受性、感染和生长。未来的研究应该有足够的能力检测干预措施在不同胎龄的婴儿和每个性别上的效果。确定接触的最佳方法、频率和持续时间也很重要。