A nutritional supplement taken during preconception and pregnancy influences human milk macronutrients in women with overweight/obesity and gestational diabetes mellitus: a randomized controlled trial
A nutritional supplement taken during preconception and pregnancy influences human milk macronutrients in women with overweight/obesity and gestational diabetes mellitus: a randomized controlled trial
Rational: Maternal overweight/obesity and gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) are associated with an increased risk of their offspring developing overweight/obesity or type 2 diabetes later in life. However, the impacts of maternal overweight/obesity and dysglycemia on human milk (HM) macronutrient composition are not well understood. Objective: Through a double-blind randomised controlled trial, we investigated the effects of maternal supplementation from preconception throughout pregnancy until birth on HM macronutrient concentrations, in association with maternal and infant factors including maternal pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI) and GDM status. In addition, we aimed to characterise longitudinal changes in HM macronutrients. Methods: The control supplement contained calcium, iodine, iron, β-carotene, and folic acid. The intervention supplement additionally contained zinc, vitamins B
2, B
6, B
12, and D
3, probiotics, and myo-inositol. HM samples were collected across seven time points from 1 week to 12 months from Singapore and/or New Zealand. HM macronutrient concentrations were measured using a MIRIS Human Milk Analyser. Potential differences in HM macronutrient concentrations were assessed using linear mixed models with a repeated measures design. Results: Overall, HM macronutrient concentrations were similar between control and intervention groups. Among the control group, overweight/obesity and GDM were associated with higher HM fat and energy concentrations over the first 3 months. Such associations were not observed among the intervention group. Of note, mothers with GDM in the intervention group had lower HM fat by 10% (p = 0.049) and energy by 6% (p = 0.029) than mothers with GDM in the control group. Longitudinal changes in HM macronutrient concentrations over 12 months of lactation in New Zealand showed that HM fat and energy decreased in the first 6 months then increased until 12 months. HM lactose gradually decreased from 1 week to 12 months while crude protein decreased from 1 week to 6 months then remained relatively constant until 12 months of lactation. Conclusion: Maternal overweight/obesity or GDM were associated with increased HM fat and energy levels. We speculate the intervention taken during preconception and pregnancy altered the impact of maternal BMI or GDM status on HM macronutrient composition. Further studies are required to identify the mechanisms underlying altered HM macronutrient concentration in the intervention group and to determine any long-term effects on offspring health. Clinical trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02509988, Universal Trial Number U1111-1171-8056. Registered on 16 July 2015. This is an academic-led study by the EpiGen Global Research Consortium.
gestational diabetes mellitus, human milk, macronutrients, maternal BMI, maternal nutrition
Han, Soo Min
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Derraik, José G.
006119b3-8592-4cf9-975d-1bd34583f669
Vickers, Mark
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Devaraj, Surabhi
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Huang, Huang
535277e2-850a-411c-90f5-bb8342493fb8
Pang, Wei Wei
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Godfrey, Keith
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Chan, Shiao-Yng
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Thakkar, Sagar K.
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Cutfield, Wayne S.
a01589bd-5b82-49fa-89e1-137e6f59e24d
2023
Han, Soo Min
a5553445-90bc-46c1-9a6c-c7a1e5465a44
Derraik, José G.
006119b3-8592-4cf9-975d-1bd34583f669
Vickers, Mark
6e05d089-9742-44f5-b4e1-3a505027d10c
Devaraj, Surabhi
f2813e88-9f3a-48f3-b99e-a43143a32151
Huang, Huang
535277e2-850a-411c-90f5-bb8342493fb8
Pang, Wei Wei
6bfc8a33-62c1-4c3b-81a3-baaa14210f8d
Godfrey, Keith
0931701e-fe2c-44b5-8f0d-ec5c7477a6fd
Chan, Shiao-Yng
3c9d8970-2cc4-430a-86a7-96f6029a5293
Thakkar, Sagar K.
9518fdfa-3c18-416f-9945-2d59bcd7ad54
Cutfield, Wayne S.
a01589bd-5b82-49fa-89e1-137e6f59e24d
Han, Soo Min, Derraik, José G., Vickers, Mark, Devaraj, Surabhi, Huang, Huang, Pang, Wei Wei, Godfrey, Keith, Chan, Shiao-Yng, Thakkar, Sagar K. and Cutfield, Wayne S.
,
NiPPeR Study Group
(2023)
A nutritional supplement taken during preconception and pregnancy influences human milk macronutrients in women with overweight/obesity and gestational diabetes mellitus: a randomized controlled trial.
Frontiers in Nutrition, 10, [1282376].
(doi:10.3389/fnut.2023.1282376).
Abstract
Rational: Maternal overweight/obesity and gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) are associated with an increased risk of their offspring developing overweight/obesity or type 2 diabetes later in life. However, the impacts of maternal overweight/obesity and dysglycemia on human milk (HM) macronutrient composition are not well understood. Objective: Through a double-blind randomised controlled trial, we investigated the effects of maternal supplementation from preconception throughout pregnancy until birth on HM macronutrient concentrations, in association with maternal and infant factors including maternal pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI) and GDM status. In addition, we aimed to characterise longitudinal changes in HM macronutrients. Methods: The control supplement contained calcium, iodine, iron, β-carotene, and folic acid. The intervention supplement additionally contained zinc, vitamins B
2, B
6, B
12, and D
3, probiotics, and myo-inositol. HM samples were collected across seven time points from 1 week to 12 months from Singapore and/or New Zealand. HM macronutrient concentrations were measured using a MIRIS Human Milk Analyser. Potential differences in HM macronutrient concentrations were assessed using linear mixed models with a repeated measures design. Results: Overall, HM macronutrient concentrations were similar between control and intervention groups. Among the control group, overweight/obesity and GDM were associated with higher HM fat and energy concentrations over the first 3 months. Such associations were not observed among the intervention group. Of note, mothers with GDM in the intervention group had lower HM fat by 10% (p = 0.049) and energy by 6% (p = 0.029) than mothers with GDM in the control group. Longitudinal changes in HM macronutrient concentrations over 12 months of lactation in New Zealand showed that HM fat and energy decreased in the first 6 months then increased until 12 months. HM lactose gradually decreased from 1 week to 12 months while crude protein decreased from 1 week to 6 months then remained relatively constant until 12 months of lactation. Conclusion: Maternal overweight/obesity or GDM were associated with increased HM fat and energy levels. We speculate the intervention taken during preconception and pregnancy altered the impact of maternal BMI or GDM status on HM macronutrient composition. Further studies are required to identify the mechanisms underlying altered HM macronutrient concentration in the intervention group and to determine any long-term effects on offspring health. Clinical trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02509988, Universal Trial Number U1111-1171-8056. Registered on 16 July 2015. This is an academic-led study by the EpiGen Global Research Consortium.
Text
NiPPeR_HMMacro_Frontiers_clean_20230926
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 26 September 2023
Published date: 2023
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. Public good funding for this investigator-led study is through the Medical Research Council (United Kingdom; MRC) as part of an MRC award to the MRC Lifecourse Epidemiology Unit (MC_UU_12011/4), the Singapore National Research Foundation, the National Medical Research Council (SG; NMRC; NMRC/TCR/012-NUHS/2014), the National University of Singapore (NUS), the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (SG) as part of the Growth, Development and Metabolism Programme of the Singapore Institute for Clinical Sciences (H17/01/a0/005), and as part of Gravida, a New Zealand Government Centre of Research Excellence. KMG is supported by the National Institute for Health Research [NIHR Senior Investigator (NF-SI-0515-10042) and NIHR Southampton Biomedical Research Centre (NIHR203319)], and the European Union (Erasmus+ Programme ImpENSA 598488-EPP-1-2018-1-DE-EPPKA2-CBHE-JP). S-YC is supported by a Singapore NMRC Clinician Scientist Award (NMRC/CSA-INV/0010/2016; MOH-CSAINV19nov-0002). Funding for provision of the intervention and control drinks and to cover aspects of the fieldwork for the study was provided by Société des Produits Nestlé S.A. under a research agreement with the University of Southampton, Auckland UniServices Ltd., Singapore Institute for Clinical Sciences, National University Hospital Singapore PTE Ltd., and NUS.
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2023 Han, Derraik, Vickers, Devaraj, Huang, Pang, Godfrey, Chan, Thakkar, Cutfield and NiPPeR Study Group.
Keywords:
gestational diabetes mellitus, human milk, macronutrients, maternal BMI, maternal nutrition
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 482629
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/482629
ISSN: 2296-861X
PURE UUID: 4713ce42-5851-4cae-b1dd-316cd8d7c11d
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Date deposited: 11 Oct 2023 16:32
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:38
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Contributors
Author:
Soo Min Han
Author:
José G. Derraik
Author:
Mark Vickers
Author:
Surabhi Devaraj
Author:
Huang Huang
Author:
Wei Wei Pang
Author:
Shiao-Yng Chan
Author:
Sagar K. Thakkar
Author:
Wayne S. Cutfield
Corporate Author: NiPPeR Study Group
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