Cardiac Performance in the First Year of Age Among Preterm Infants Fed Maternal Breast Milk.
El-Khuffash A., Lewandowski AJ., Jain A., Hamvas A., Singh GK., Levy PT.
Importance: There is a beneficial association between human breast milk exposure in the neonatal period and cardiac mechanics in adults who were born preterm. It is unknown whether this benefit is apparent in infants in the first year of age. Objective: To test the hypothesis that higher consumption of mother's own milk in preterm infants is associated with enhanced cardiac performance during the first year of age. Design, Setting, and Participants: This cross-sectional study of cardiac and nutritional data at an academic medical center included 80 individuals born preterm and 100 individuals in the control group born full-term. All births were between 2011 and 2013. Two-dimensional echocardiograms were performed at 32 weeks' and 36 weeks' postmenstrual age and at 1 year's corrected age in individuals born preterm and at 1 month and 1 year of age in individuals born full-term. Statistical analysis was performed from January to May 2021. Exposures: Consumption of mother's own milk. Main Outcomes and Measures: Main study outcomes included echocardiography measures of right and left ventricle longitudinal strain (function), left ventricle mass index and right ventricular areas (morphology), and pulmonary vascular resistance (pulmonary hemodynamics) at age 1 year. Results: Of 180 infants included in the study, 97 (54%) were Black infants and 89 (49%) were female infants. Among the 80 infants born in the preterm cohort, 43 (54%) were female infants and 43 (54%) were Black infants. The median gestational age at birth of the preterm infants was 27.0 weeks (interquartile range, 26.0-28.0 weeks) and the median birth weight was 960 g (interquartile range, 800-1138). For each week of exposure to mother's own milk, preterm infants had greater magnitudes of right ventricular strain (eg, right longitudinal strain: β, 0.021; 95% CI, 0.002-0.041; P