在一项双盲随机对照试验中,含有乳脂和益生元的婴儿配方奶粉会影响肠道菌群,但不会影响婴儿期感染的发生率。

IF 2.4 Q1 PEDIATRICS Molecular and cellular pediatrics Pub Date : 2020-07-02 DOI:10.1186/s40348-020-00098-1
Antonia Nomayo, Andreas Schwiertz, Rainer Rossi, Katharina Timme, Janine Foster, Richard Zelenka, Josef Tvrdik, Frank Jochum
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引用次数: 7

摘要

背景:母乳喂养和配方奶粉喂养的婴儿出生后肠道定植有很大的不同,婴儿对传染病的易感性也有很大的不同。母乳中的特定成分,如益生元母乳低聚糖和含有高比例β -棕榈酸(β -pa)的特殊结构脂肪成分,可以促进肠道双歧杆菌的生长,这对婴儿的健康有良好的影响。本研究探讨了在婴儿配方奶粉中添加益生元低聚半乳糖(GOS)和大量从牛奶脂肪中提取的β - pa是否会对配方奶粉喂养的婴儿的肠道微生物群和感染发生率产生积极影响。方法:在双盲对照试验中,配方奶喂养的婴儿随机分为两组,一组服用天然牛乳脂肪中β - pa含量较高(20-25%)的实验配方奶粉,另一组服用益生元补充剂(0.5 g GOS/100 ml),另一组服用低β - pa含量(< 10%)的标准婴儿配方奶粉,不含益生元。一个母乳喂养参照组也被纳入研究。12周后,收集粪便样本,测定粪便双歧杆菌比例。记录了生命第一年的感染人数。结果:12周后,接受高- pa和GOS配方奶粉的婴儿粪便双歧杆菌比例显著高于对照组,与母乳喂养组相似(中位数分别为8.8%、2.5%和5.0%;P < 0.001)。在生命的第一年,胃肠道或其他感染的发生率在两组之间没有差异。结论:高剂量β - pa + GOS联合使用可显著提高配方奶喂养婴儿粪便双歧杆菌比例,但不影响感染发生率。试验注册:研究方案于2012年5月15日在临床试验(方案注册和结果系统试验ID: NCT01603719)注册(回顾性注册)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Infant formula with cow's milk fat and prebiotics affects intestinal flora, but not the incidence of infections during infancy in a double-blind randomized controlled trial.

Background: The postnatal intestinal colonization of human milk-fed and formula-fed infants differs substantially, as does the susceptibility to infectious diseases during infancy. Specific ingredients in human milk, such as prebiotic human milk oligosaccharides and a specifically structured fat composition with high proportion of beta-palmitic acid (beta-PA) promote the growth of intestinal bifidobacteria, which are associated with favorable effects on infants' health. The present study investigates whether addition of prebiotic galactooligosaccharides (GOS) in combination with higher amounts of beta-PA from cow's milk fat in infant formula positively affects gut microbiota and the incidence of infections in formula-fed infants.

Methods: In a double-blind controlled trial, formula-fed infants were randomly assigned to either receive an experimental formula containing a higher proportion of beta-PA (20-25%) from natural cow's milk fat, and a prebiotic supplement (0.5 g GOS/100 ml), or a standard infant formula with low beta-PA (< 10%), without prebiotics. A breast-fed reference group was also enrolled. After 12 weeks, fecal samples were collected to determine the proportion of fecal bifidobacteria. The number of infections during the first year of life was recorded.

Results: After 12 weeks, the proportion of fecal bifidobacteria was significantly higher in infants receiving formula with high beta-PA and GOS compared to control, and was similar to the breast-fed group (medians 8.8%, 2.5%, and 5.0% respectively; p < 0.001). The incidence of gastrointestinal or other infections during the first year of life did not differ between groups.

Conclusions: The combination of higher amounts of beta-PA plus GOS increased significantly the proportion of fecal bifidobacteria in formula-fed infants, but did not affect the incidence of infections.

Trial registration: The study protocol was registered with Clinical Trials (Protocol Registration and Results System Trial ID: NCT01603719 ) on 05/15/2012 (retrospectively registered).

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