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Effect of a New Infant Formula With Specific Ingredients

Not Applicable
Conditions
Infant Growth
Interventions
Dietary Supplement: Enriched infant formula
Dietary Supplement: Standard formula
Dietary Supplement: Breastfeeding arm
Registration Number
NCT04306263
Lead Sponsor
Laboratorios Ordesa
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to test whether the addition of certain bioactive ingredients to a new infant formula (HMOs, osteopontin and probiotics) can have a favorable impact on the development of the infant's immune system in the first months of life.

Detailed Description

Nowadays, almost all commercial infant formulas resemble the "gold standard" of breast milk in terms of composition of essential nutrients, but it is still a challenge to identify and incorporate certain bioactive components capable of replicating those stimuli typical of breast milk that can program growth, infant development and maturation of the immune system.

The purpose of this study is to test whether the addition of certain bioactive ingredients to a new infant formula (HMOs, osteopontin and probiotics) can have a favorable impact on the development of the infant's immune system in the first months of life.

In addition, considering that the quality of feeding at these early ages will program (Early programming) the health and physiology of the child and the future adult, the study wants to obtain evidence of the effects of this new infant formula on the immune system and the development of the child compared to breast milk during the first year of life, hoping that it promotes proper growth, adequate cognitive development and maturation of the immune system as similar as possible to children fed to the mother's breast.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
231
Inclusion Criteria
  • Inclusion age from 0 to 2.5 months of age.
  • Gestational age >37 weeks and <41 weeks inclusive.
  • Appropriate birth weight appropriate for your gestational age (between 10-90 percentiles).
  • APGAR score normal birth to 1' and 5' of 7 - 10.
  • Umbilical pH ≥ 7.10.
  • Availability to continue throughout the study period.
  • Written informed consent

Additional Inclusion Criteria for groups 1 and 2:

  • Infants who, at the time of recruitment, have already passed the diet with a majority or exclusive formula for medical reasons, by decision of the parents or any other reason agreed with the pediatrician.

Additional Inclusion Criteria for group 3 (breastfeed infants):

  • Infants who have been breastfed until the second month with exclusive or majority breastfeeding.
  • Infants who are expected to be exclusively or predominantly breastfed up to 6 months.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Simultaneous participation in other clinical trials.
  • Infants suffering from gastrointestinal disorders (allergy and/or intolerance to cow's milk protein or lactose).
  • Mother's pathology history and during gestation: neurological diseases, metabolic disorders, type 1 diabetes mellitus, chronic disease (hypothyroidism), maternal malnutrition, TORCH syndrome.
  • Treatment of the mother's anxiolytics or antidepressants. Other treatments with drugs potentially harmful to neurodevelopment.
  • Inability of the parents to follow up the study (medical decision).

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Enriched infant formulaEnriched infant formulaInfant formula enriched with dairy ingredients: osteopontin, prebiotics (Human milk oligosaccharide, Glucooligosaccharides) and probiotics.
Standard formulaStandard formulaInfants receiving a standard infant formula.
Breastfeeding armBreastfeeding armInfants exclusively or predominantly breastfed (\>75%).
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Register of diarrhea episodesFrom baseline to 12 months.

Presence and duration of diarrhea, registered in patients dairies.

Register of fever episodesFrom baseline to 12 months.

Presence and duration of the fever and treatments, through diaries completed by parents

Register of infectionsFrom baseline to 12 months

Register of infant infections through patient diaries completed by parents

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Obstetric backgroundBaseline

Relevant obstetric background

Study of the infant microbiotaAt 3, 6 and 12 months.

Stool bacteria count

Immune response evaluationAt 3, 6 and 12 months of age

registration of Immunoglobulin secreted in saliva

Demographic dataFrom baseline to 12 months.

age of the parents, educational level of the parents, habits and lifestyles of the parents, residence and social environment of the infant.

Infant neurodevelopmentAt 12 months

Analysis of eye movements. Eye tracking technologies is using to assess early cognitive development to evaluate attention domain

Infant neurodevelopment 2At 2, 3, 4, 6, 9 and 12 months of age.

ASQ-3 (Ages \& Stages Questionnaires®) ASQ-3 is a set of questionnaires about children's development

Assessment of normal growth of the infantFrom baseline to 12 months.

Evolution of Weight (g), Size (cm) to calculate the Body Mass Index.weight and height will be combined to report BMI in kg/m\^2

Infant neurodevelopment 3At 2, 3 and 4 months of life.

General Movements test (GM´s) GM's is using for the neurological assessment during the first months of life and measures a series of gross movements of variable amplitude and speed involving all body parts

Infant neurodevelopment 512 months of age

MacArthur Communicative Development Inventory (CDI) . This test assesses the normal process of early language acquisition by various manifestations

Infant neurodevelopment 46 and 12 months of age

Bayley´s Scales of Infant Development III (Spanish version BSID III) is using to evaluate psychomotor and mental development .

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Cristina Campoy

🇪🇸

Granada, Andalucia, Spain

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