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Infant milk-feeding practices and cardiovascular disease outcomes in offspring: a systematic review.

Authors :
Güngör D
Nadaud P
LaPergola CC
Dreibelbis C
Wong YP
Terry N
Abrams SA
Beker L
Jacobovits T
Järvinen KM
Nommsen-Rivers LA
O'Brien KO
Oken E
Pérez-Escamilla R
Ziegler EE
Spahn JM
Source :
The American journal of clinical nutrition [Am J Clin Nutr] 2019 Mar 01; Vol. 109 (Suppl_7), pp. 800S-816S.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background: During the Pregnancy and Birth to 24 Months Project, the US Departments of Agriculture and Health and Human Services initiated a review of evidence on diet and health in these populations.<br />Objectives: The aim of these systematic reviews was to examine the relation of 1) never versus ever feeding human milk, 2) shorter versus longer durations of any human milk feeding, 3) shorter versus longer durations of exclusive human milk feeding, and 4) lower versus higher intensities of human milk fed to mixed-fed infants with intermediate and endpoint cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes in offspring.<br />Methods: The Nutrition Evidence Systematic Review team conducted systematic reviews with external experts. We searched CINAHL, Cochrane, Embase, and PubMed for articles published January 1980-March 2016, dual-screened the results using predetermined criteria, extracted data from and assessed the risk of bias for each included study, qualitatively synthesized the evidence, developed conclusion statements, and graded the strength of the evidence.<br />Results: The 4 systematic reviews included 13, 24, 6, and 0 articles, respectively. The evidence was insufficient to draw conclusions about endpoint CVD outcomes across all 4 systematic reviews. Limited evidence suggests that never versus ever being fed human milk is associated with higher blood pressure within a normal range at 6-7 y of age. Moderate evidence suggests there is no association between the duration of any human milk feeding and childhood blood pressure. Limited evidence suggests there is no association between the duration of exclusive human milk feeding and blood pressure or metabolic syndrome in childhood. Additional evidence about intermediate outcomes for the 4 systematic reviews was scant or inconclusive.<br />Conclusions: There is insufficient evidence to draw conclusions about the relationships between infant milk-feeding practices and endpoint CVD outcomes; however, some evidence suggests that feeding less or no human milk is not associated with childhood hypertension.<br /> (© American Society for Nutrition 2019.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1938-3207
Volume :
109
Issue :
Suppl_7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The American journal of clinical nutrition
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30982872
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/nqy332