Tamar Christian, Greenfield Kara, McDonald Katya, Levy Emily, Brumbaugh Jane E, Knoop Kathryn
Department of Immunology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, United States of America.
Department of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2025 Apr 16;20(4):e0313465. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0313465. eCollection 2025.
Human milk contains a variety of factors that positively contribute to neonatal health, including epidermal growth factor (EGF) and immunoglobulin A (IgA). When maternal milk cannot be the primary diet, maternal milk alternatives like donor human milk or formula can be provided. Donor human milk is increasingly provided to infants born preterm or low birth weight with the aim to supply immunological factors at similar concentrations to maternal milk. We sought to assess the concentrations of human EGF and IgA in the diet and stool of neonates between exclusive maternal milk, donor human milk, or formula-based diets. Using a prospective cohort study, we collected samples of diet and stool weekly from premature and low birth weight neonates starting at 10 days postnatal through five weeks of life while admitted to a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). Compared to formula, there was significantly more EGF in both the milk and the stool of the infants fed human milk. Donor milk pooled from multiple donors contained similar concentrations of EGF and IgA to maternal milk, which was also significantly more than formula diets. Maternal milk supplemented with a fortifier derived from human milk contained significantly more EGF and IgA compared to unfortified maternal milk or maternal milk supplemented with fortifier derived from bovine milk. Further analysis of human milk-derived fortifiers confirmed these fortifiers contained significant concentrations of EGF and IgA, contributing to an increased concentration of those factors that bovine milk-derived fortifiers do not confer. These findings illustrate how the choice of diet for a newborn, and even how that diet is modified through fortifiers or pasteurization before ingestion, impacts the beneficial biomolecules the infant receives from feeding.
母乳含有多种对新生儿健康有积极作用的因素,包括表皮生长因子(EGF)和免疫球蛋白A(IgA)。当母乳无法作为主要饮食时,可以提供母乳替代品,如捐赠母乳或配方奶。越来越多的早产或低体重出生的婴儿被提供捐赠母乳,目的是提供与母乳浓度相似的免疫因子。我们试图评估纯母乳喂养、捐赠母乳或配方奶喂养的新生儿饮食和粪便中人类EGF和IgA的浓度。通过一项前瞻性队列研究,我们从新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)收治的早产和低体重新生儿出生后10天开始,直至出生后五周,每周收集其饮食和粪便样本。与配方奶相比,母乳喂养的婴儿的乳汁和粪便中的EGF含量明显更高。从多个捐赠者收集的捐赠母乳中EGF和IgA的浓度与母乳相似,也明显高于配方奶喂养。与未强化的母乳或添加牛源性强化剂的母乳相比,添加人源性强化剂的母乳中EGF和IgA的含量明显更高。对人源性强化剂的进一步分析证实,这些强化剂含有大量的EGF和IgA,这使得这些因子的浓度增加,而牛源性强化剂则无法提供这些因子。这些发现说明了新生儿饮食的选择,甚至饮食在摄入前通过强化剂或巴氏杀菌法如何改变,都会影响婴儿从喂养中获得的有益生物分子。