Title

Nutritive Efficacy and Safety of a Modified Infant Formula With a Reduced Protein Content and Improved Protein Quality
Nutritive Efficacy and Safety of a Modified Infant Formula With a Reduced Protein: Content and Improved Protein Quality: LactPro-Minus
  • Phase

    N/A
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Completed No Results Posted
  • Intervention/Treatment

    alpha-lactalbumin ...
  • Study Participants

    120
Formula contains significantly higher total protein concentrations than breast milk. Therefore formula-fed infants have a significantly higher total protein intake in the first few months compared to exclusively breast-fed infants.

The aim is to examine the nutritive efficacy and safety of a modified infant formula with a reduced protein content and improved protein quality in a prospective, double-blind, controled, randomized study. Primary outcome measures are weight gain and growth of young infants under 12 weeks of dietary intake of the new infant formula. Metabolic effects of the qualitative and quantitative changes in the protein content of the new formula will be recorded. Two groups of healthy bottle-fed infants will be compared. The treatment group will be fed for 3 months with an infant formula with decreased protein content. At the same time the protein body of the new formula is modified by enrichment with bovine alpha-lactalbumin.

A control group receives a isocaloric conventional infant formula and a protein body consisting of whey protein and casein in a ratio of 60:40, without specific accumulation of alpha-lactalbumin over the same time-period.

A group of breastmilk fed infants will serve as a reference group. In regular anthropometric controls growth and thriving of the study participants is documented and compared between the different groups.
Breast milk is considered the gold standard for early childhood nutrition, it is optimized in terms of ingredients to the needs of the infant in the first months of life. Formula differ in many ways in their composition to breast milk, e.g. in the structure and concentration of the protein contained.

To ensure adequate supply of the infant with all essential and semi-essential amino acids conventional infant formula contains significantly higher total protein concentrations than breast milk. Therefore formula-fed infants have a significantly higher total protein intake in the first few months compared to exclusively breast-fed infants, and individual amino acids are therefore fed in excess.

The increased intake of protein, and thus the increased intake of some insulinogenic amino acids in infancy (e.g. the branched chain amino acids leucine, isoleucine and valine), is now considered as a possible co-factor for later disposition to overweight and obesity. Breastfeeding induces slower growth of the infant and is proven to be associated with a lower risk of being overweight or obese at the time of school entry (von Kries 1999). The higher protein intake in bottle-fed babies seems to contribute significantly to the differences that can be observed in the growth behavior between breast-fed and bottle-fed children in the first years of life.

Obvious approaches to optimize infant formula are therefore the reduction of protein content, while ensuring an adequate supply of all relevant amino acids similar to breast milk.

Enrichment with alpha-lactalbumin enables the reduction of total protein content in the formula through the qualitative upgrading of the protein body and the high content of essential amino acids, thereby limiting a surplus of protein intake, but at the same time to supply adequate amounts of essential amino acids.

The aim is to examine the nutritive efficacy and safety of a modified infant formula with a reduced protein content and improved protein quality. Primary outcome measures are weight gain and growth of young infants under the 12 weeks of dietary intake of the new infant formula, and metabolic effects of the qualitative and quantitative changes in the protein content of the new formula. Two groups of healthy bottle-fed infants will be compared. The treatment group will be fed for 3 months with an infant formula with decreased protein content. At the same time the body of experimental protein infant formula was modified by enrichment with bovine alpha-lactalbumin.

A control group receives a isocaloric conventional infant formula and a protein body consisting of whey protein and casein in a ratio of 60:40, without specific accumulation of alpha-lactalbumin over the same time period.

A group of breastmilk fed infants will serve as a reference group.

In regular anthropometric controls growth and thriving of the study participants is documented and compared between the different groups. In addition, laboratory tests are carried out, which will examine the influence of diet on insulin response, protein metabolism and specific growth factors.

In a follow-up long-term effects of nutrition on body composition will be recorded by comparing body fat measurements (skinfold thickness-Calipometrie) during the first year of life.
Study Started
Jan 31
2014
Primary Completion
Dec 31
2016
Study Completion
Dec 31
2016
Last Update
Jun 09
2020

Dietary Supplement Standard infant formula

Dietary Supplement Protein reduced alpha-lactalbumin formula, with higher levels of alpha-lactalbumin

Standard infant formula Active Comparator

Standard infant formula

Protein reduced formula Experimental

Protein reduced alpha-lactalbumin formula

Breast-feeding No Intervention

Exclusive breast-feeding

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

At the time of study enrollment apparently healthy newborns / infants without pronounced hyper- or hypotrophy (age-appropriate weight percentiles > 3 and < 97 according to Voigt et al.)
Maternal decision against breastfeeding (for Formula Groups)

Exclusion Criteria:

Congenital gastrointestinal malformations, metabolic disease, chromosomal aberration, syndromic disease with significant impact on growth, development, nutrition, immune competence
Manifestation of a serious disease, which is expected to be accompanied by growth retardation, intestinal transit disruption or the need for special dietary treatment (e.g. hypertrophic pyloric stenosis, cystic fibrosis, Hirschsprung's disease, cow's milk protein intolerance.)
Decision to administer HA (hypoallergenic) formula due to family atopies (defined by atopic disease of at least one 1 st degree relative: bronchial asthma, atopic dermatitis, pollinosis)
Participation in another nutritional study
No Results Posted