Abstract

Fortification refers to the practice of enriching human milk feeds for very preterm babies with macronutrients, minerals and vitamins. Though standard of care in some parts of the world, adoption of fortification is not universal. Fortification entered into use on the assumption that human milk macronutrient content, principally protein, is insufficient to support the growth and development of very preterm babies. However, because of the substantial variability in human milk composition, routine fortification risks exposing some babies to very high protein intakes, which may be dangerous. Some clinicians fear fortification with cow-milk derived products will increase the risk of necrotising enterocolitis, leading them to favour commercial fortifiers made from pooled human milk over cow milk based products, a practice that has additional ethical implications. Randomised controlled trials of multi-nutrient fortification to-date are inadequate. No trial has had power to detect important functional effects; the majority are methodologically weak and focus primarily upon short-term growth. Evidence to guide practice is inadequate. There is an urgent need for collaboration to conduct high-quality research to end these long-standing uncertainties.

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