Impact of Antioxidant Juice Intake on Brain Injury and Placental Pathology in Infants With Intrauterine Growth Restriction (IUGR)
- Conditions
- Intrauterine Growth Restriction
- Interventions
- Dietary Supplement: Placebo JuiceDietary Supplement: Pomegranate Juice
- Registration Number
- NCT04394910
- Lead Sponsor
- Brigham and Women's Hospital
- Brief Summary
Infants diagnosed with intrauterine growth restriction are at increased risk for brain injury in the neonatal period, and eventually increased risk for adverse long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes. This kind of growth restriction is often caused by long-term placental insufficiency leading to chronic lack of oxygen in the brain during development. Pomegranate juice is one of the highest polyphenol-containing dietary supplements commercially available. Previous studies have shown that pomegranate-derived polyphenols are potent neuroprotective antioxidants with no proven side effects. The investigators hypothesize that maternal dietary supplementation with pomegranate juice during the last trimester of pregnancy will reduce the effects of exogenous stimuli contributing to placental insufficiency, and will enhance brain growth and development in the IUGR population.
- Detailed Description
The current study seeks to investigate the impact of maternal dietary supplementation with pomegranate juice on placental morphology and on subsequent newborn brain development and function. A total of 99 consenting women carrying fetuses with a diagnosis of intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) in the third trimester were randomized to one of two arms.
Treatment Group: Expecting mothers in this group will be randomized to consume 8oz of pomegranate juice daily. Participants will keep a daily diary documenting compliance with the regimen. Participants will continue daily intake until delivery.
Placebo group: Expecting mothers will be randomized to consume an 8oz of pomegranate free juice placebo that matches taste, calories, and appearance to regular pomegranate juice but lacks polyphenols. Participants will keep a diary of daily intake to help ensure compliance similar to the treatment group. Participants will continue to placebo until delivery.
Both groups: Maternal blood and urine samples will be collected prior to starting the juice regimen in order to establish baseline metabolite status. For the first 84 mothers enrolled, a fetal MRI was scheduled prior to beginning the juice regimen. Phase I participants will undergo two fetal echocardiograms: one before starting the juice regimen, and a second two weeks into the juice regimen to establish the safety of high polyphenol intake on fetal heart development. All women will be contacted on a weekly basis to assess compliance. At the time of delivery, maternal blood and urine, and cord blood will be collected and sent for analysis to test for the presence of dimethylellagic acid glucuronide (DMEAG) and urolithin A glucuronide (UAG), polyphenic components of pomegranate juice. Placental material will be sent for formal pathological exam.
If clinically stable, MRI will be undertaken without sedation at term equivalent (38-41 weeks CGA). Infants will undergo testing of cognitive, gross and fine motor, and speech skills at around 2 years of age.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- Female
- Target Recruitment
- 103
- Expecting mother with a fetal diagnosis of less than 5th percentile on the Doubilet fetal growth curve
- Multiple congenital abnormalities
- Known fetal chromosomal disorder
- Maternal illicit drug or alcohol intake
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Placebo Juice Placebo Juice Dietary supplementation with 8 oz. placebo juice (identical to pomegranate juice but lacking polyphenols) consumed daily. Pomegranate Juice Pomegranate Juice Dietary supplementation with 8 oz. commercially-available pomegranate juice consumed daily.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Infant brain injury assessed on term-equivalent brain magnetic resonance image (MRI) using the Kidokoro injury scoring system. One time occurrence at birth or term-equivalent age if infant is born preterm. The Kidokoro scale is a comprehensive, objective scoring system for classifying the nature and extent of neonatal brain injury on MRI (Kidokoro et al. American Journal of Neuroradiology. 2013; 34(11):2208-14).
Total and regional infant brain volumes assessed on term equivalent brain MRI using MANTiS. One time occurrence at birth or term-equivalent age if infant is born preterm. MANTiS (Morphologically Adaptive Neonatal Tissue Segmentation) describes neonate-specific brain tissue segmentation into 8 categories using Statistical Parametric Mapping (SPM) software (Beare et al. Frontiers in Neuroinformatics. 2016;10:12).
Diffusion tensor imaging measures of fractional anisotropy (FA), and mean (MD), radial (RD), and axial (AD) diffusivity from infant term equivalent brain MRI. One time occurrence at birth or term-equivalent age if infant is born preterm. FA, MD, RD, and AD will be measured from a diffusion-weighted sequence on brain MRI.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Maternal compliance with juice regimen. Comparison of one pre-juice regimen UA and DMEAG concentration measurement (ng/mL) to one post-juice regimen blood and urine concentration measurement (ng/mL) collected at the time of delivery. Maternal compliance with the assigned juice regimen is assessed by participant logbook record and assessment of change in polyphenols (urolithin A and dimethylellagic glucuronide concentration, ng/mL) in maternal urine and blood at enrollment and in maternal urine, blood and cord blood at the time of delivery.
Cognitive, motor, and language neurodevelopment scores on the Bayley III exam. The Bayley III exam will be administered at a one-time visit scheduled between 18-36 months. The Bayley Scores of Infant and Toddler Development (Edition III) is a comprehensive examination tool used to assess neurodevelopment in infants and toddlers up to 42 months.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Brigham and Women's Hospital
🇺🇸Boston, Massachusetts, United States