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Clinical assessment of breastfeeding in preterm infants

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posted on 2024-11-20, 15:53 authored by Meredith KinoshitaMeredith Kinoshita, Martin WhiteMartin White, Anne DoolanAnne Doolan

Breastmilk confers empirical benefits for preterm infants, however direct breastfeeding rates in this population remain low. For preterm infants, it may be useful to assess the volume of breastmilk transferred from mother to baby when breastfeeding, particularly during transition to oral feeding when breastfeeding attrition is high. Establishing breastfeeding in preterm infants is complex and without knowledge of milk intake during breastfeeds there is risk of inaccurate feed supplementation with subsequent effects on growth and nutrition. Here we review the evidence for clinical assessments of breastfeeding in preterm infants including test weighing, use of isotope labelled water and clinical observation tools designed to estimate adequacy of breastfeeds. Test weighing is a validated measurement, however requires rigorous protocols and further investigation in small infants. Use of isotope labelled water is a validated technique but, due to sampling requirements, reflects intake over days and weeks instead of individual feeds. Clinical observation tools assessed in preterm infants, have not been shown to reflect volumes of breastmilk intake. While current methods have limitations, the goal is to identify measurement tools to be used as temporary aids to facilitate transition to direct breastfeeding while minimising risk of inaccurate supplementation. 

Funding

Open Access funding provided by the IReL Consortium.

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The original article is available at https://www.nature.com/

Published Citation

Kinoshita M, White MJ, Doolan A. Clinical assessment of breastfeeding in preterm infants. Eur J Clin Nutr. 2024;78(10):825-829

Publication Date

9 July 2024

PubMed ID

38982131

Department/Unit

  • Paediatrics

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)

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