- BP
blood pressure
- PROBIT
Promotion of Breastfeeding Intervention Trial
- RCT
randomised control trial
Breast-feeding has several short-term benefits for morbidity and mortality, particularly in situations where there is inadequate access to clean water, and for infants born preterm(Reference Horta, Bahl and Martinés1, Reference Kramer2). However, in recent years, there has been increasing focus on the possibility that breast-feeding, or breast milk feeding, could have beneficial effects for later health outcomes, including the risk of obesity and CVD(Reference Horta, Bahl and Martinés1–Reference Ip, Chung and Raman3). Evidence from human subjects relating to this concept comes from two sources: observational studies and randomised trials. This paper focuses on data from experimental or randomised trials, while an accompanying paper by Christopher Owen reviews data from observational studies.
Breast-feeding and later health: observational studies v. randomised trials
Both types of study can provide data relevant to the question of whether breast-feeding influences later health outcomes, and both approaches have strengths and weaknesses(Reference Fewtrell, Kennedy and Singhal4). Observational studies, such as birth cohorts, have the advantage that sample sizes are often large, final disease end-points may be available and hence results can often be rapidly obtained. Their main disadvantage lies in the fact that causality cannot be demonstrated because the mode of infant feeding is not randomly assigned; hence, these studies can show associations between infant feeding and later health but cannot alone be used as a basis for policy. Furthermore, as many of these cohorts were not established specifically to examine later effects of infant feeding, the available data on early nutritional exposures may be sub-optimal. In contrast, the main advantage of randomised trials lies in the fact that they can demonstrate causal relationships between intervention and outcome, provided studies are well designed and executed. Hence, they are regarded as the ‘gold-standard’ in terms of providing evidence that can be used to underpin public health practice. The main disadvantage of prospective studies (whether randomised or observational) in the context of investigating later health effects is the time-scale required to study later health outcomes such as CVD, which do not manifest until decades after the intervention. Consequently, studies generally use proxy measures of these later outcomes; for example, plasma lipids or blood pressure (BP) as markers of CVD risk. There is then the question of the extent to which these proxy markers measured in childhood or adolescence predict the eventual disease risk. While certain parameters such as BP or plasma cholesterol concentration have been shown to track with age(Reference Juhola, Magnussen and Viikari5), this is not the case for other measures such as plasma insulin or bone mass.
Methodological issues in studies comparing breast-feeding with not breast-feeding
There are specific difficulties when comparing outcomes in infants who are breast-fed v. those who are not, in particular that it is unethical and unfeasible to randomly assign healthy term infants to their mode of feeding. This precludes the use of the ‘gold-standard’ randomised trial approach for the majority of the population. In both randomised trials and observational studies, there is the additional problem that neither ‘breast-feeding’ nor the alternative (‘not breast-feeding’) are precise or constant entities; breast-feeding varies in duration and exclusivity, and nutrient intakes vary even within the same infant over the course of a day, while the alternative, ‘not breast-feeding’, can also vary in terms of the type of milk or infant formula used. Thus, in contrast to the situation in a pharmaceutical trial that compares fixed doses of drug and placebo for a fixed time period, there is much more variability or ‘noise’ in any comparison of breast-feeding v. not breast-feeding.
Other issues that are important when comparing the findings of the many different studies in this field include the classification and definition of infant feeding and the source of data on infant feeding. At one extreme, some studies use a crude measure such as ‘ever’ v. ‘never’ breast-fed, whereas at the other extreme, studies include much more detailed data on breast-feeding duration and exclusivity. Some studies obtain infant feeding data prospectively from the mother or medical records, whereas others rely on maternal recall, sometimes years after the event. It is well recognised that the apparent incidence of breast-feeding is influenced by the method used to obtain the information(Reference Flaherman, Chien and McCulloch6). This problem could be addressed by adopting more standardised methods for collecting and classifying infant feeding behaviour in prospective studies. However, so far this has not been achieved.
The type of data collected on potential confounding variables also varies in quantity and quality between studies, and this is recognised to be a significant problem when performing systematic reviews and meta-analyses(Reference Horta, Bahl and Martinés1, Reference Ip, Chung and Raman3). It is particularly relevant in studies examining the relationship between breast-feeding and later cognitive outcome, where studies that adjust for maternal IQ are less likely to report a significant beneficial effect of breast-feeding on cognitive outcome than those adjusting for more proxy measures such as maternal educational level or social status(Reference Ip, Chung and Raman3). However, this issue is also important for studies examining effects on later fatness or obesity risk, where parental BMI is a significant, but inconsistently measured, confounder(Reference Ip, Chung and Raman3). Although confounding is a major issue for observational studies, it is also relevant for randomised trials where later follow-up is incomplete(Reference Fewtrell, Kennedy and Singhal4).
Specific difficulties in conducting long-term follow-up studies
In order to examine effects of infant nutrition on later health outcomes, long-term follow-up is required. A major problem experienced to some degree by all studies in this field is that of attrition or loss-to-follow-up. The degree of attrition varies depending on the length of follow-up, nature of the investigations proposed and the inconvenience involved for the subject. The problem of attrition in long-term follow-up studies was recently discussed in detail in a paper that addressed the statistical implications of attrition for the interpretation of data(Reference Fewtrell, Kennedy and Singhal4). Attrition can lead to selection bias, since subjects who are lost to follow-up are rarely identical to those who agree to participate, and also to a loss of power to detect a hypothesised effect. It may also affect the generalisability of the findings. Rather than imposing arbitrary figures for what constitutes an ‘acceptable’ follow-up rate, for example, 80% as used to separate ‘high’- and ‘low’-quality randomised control trials (RCT) in evidence-based medicine(Reference Sackett, Strauss and Richardson7, 8), it has been suggested that investigators should explicitly address the potential effects of attrition when analysing and reporting follow-up studies, so that readers are able to consider the likely impact when interpreting findings(Reference Fewtrell, Kennedy and Singhal4).
Experimental studies in breast-feeding research
Given the inherent difficulties discussed earlier, it is perhaps not surprising that there have been only two randomised trials comparing health outcomes in relation to breast-feeding or breast milk feeding in human subjects. The design of these two studies is described in the next section, followed by a discussion on the results of follow-up data on BP, plasma lipids and obesity.
Randomised trial of infant feeding in preterm infants(Reference Lucas, Gore and Cole9)
This randomised trial was initiated in 1982, at a time when there was considerable uncertainty about the best way to feed preterm infants. The diets commonly used to feed preterm infants at the time included unsupplemented banked donor breast milk and infant formulae designed to meet the nutritional requirements for healthy term infants. It was therefore considered both acceptable and feasible to randomise these vulnerable infants to their diet during the neonatal period to test the hypothesis that improving their nutrition would have benefits for both short- and long-term health outcomes. A total of 926 preterm infants (birthweight <1850 g and gestational age <37 weeks) were recruited from five UK neonatal units, and randomised to the milk received for, on average, the first month of life. In three of the hospitals, where there was a breast milk bank, the assignment was either to unsupplemented banked donor breast milk or to a newly developed nutrient-enriched preterm infant formula. In the remaining two centres, which did not have a breast milk bank, the assignment was to standard term infant formula or to preterm infant formula. In all cases, the randomised assignment could be fed as the infant's sole diet if the mother chose not to express any of her own breast milk, or given as a supplement to maternal breast milk if the latter was available. The comparison of donor breast milk v. preterm infant formula represents the only trial in which human infants have been randomised to breast milk v. infant formula without confounding by the mother's decision to breast-feed.
Infants enrolled in this trial were intensively monitored while they were in the neonatal unit, with daily records of nutritional intake, regular anthropometry and blood sampling. They were subsequently followed-up at intervals throughout childhood and into early adult life to examine effects of infant diet on a variety of later health outcomes, including neurodevelopment, bone health and cardiovascular health. It is important to note that many of the preterm infants in the study were never actually breast-fed; human milk was typically fed via a naso-gastric tube during the period of hospitalisation and many infants did not breast-feed after discharge. This is therefore primarily a study of ‘breast milk feeding’ rather than ‘breast-feeding’.
Randomised trial of a breast-feeding promotion intervention in healthy term infants (the Promotion of Breast-feeding Intervention Trial trial(Reference Kramer, Chalmers and Hodnett10))
This cluster-randomised trial, conducted in the Republic of Belarus, compared outcomes in healthy term infants born in clinics that were randomly assigned either to a breast-feeding promotion intervention (modelled on the UNICEF ‘Ten steps to successful breast-feeding’(11)) v. standard management. The study enrolled 17 046 mother–infant pairs from thirty-one clinics (the unit of randomisation). The intervention resulted in a significant increase in both the incidence and duration of breast-feeding and exclusive breast-feeding up to 1 year of age. For example, rates of ‘any breast-feeding’ for the intervention and control groups were 72·7% v. 60% at 3 months, 36·1% v. 24·4% at 6 months and 19·7% v. 11·4% at 12 months, respectively. Rates of exclusive breast-feeding were also significantly higher in the intervention group (43·3% v. 6·4% at 3 months and 7·9% v. 0·6% at 6 months).
This was not a trial of breast-feeding v. formula-feeding, but rather compared groups of infants who received ‘some’ breast-feeding’ v. those receiving ‘more’ and ‘more exclusive’ breast-feeding. Children from this study are being followed up throughout childhood, with 6-year follow-up data already published (see later).
Breast milk feeding and later cardiovascular health outcomes
Blood pressure
Two hundred and sixteen subjects (of 926 subjects originally enrolled and 831 survivors) from the preterm RCT were studied at 13–15 years of age. Those who had been randomised to receive human milk, either as sole diet or as a supplement to maternal breast milk, during the neonatal period had significantly lower mean and diastolic BP, with a mean difference of 4·1 and 3·2 mmHg, respectively, between groups (P<0·05 for both). This difference remained after adjusting for sex, neonatal Na intake and current BMI(Reference Singhal, Cole and Lucas12). Furthermore, there was a ‘dose–response’ effect, with decreasing BP as the proportion of human milk received in the neonatal period increased (P=0·02 for trend). Although the observed effect size is small in terms of the effect at an individual level, it would be expected to have a significant impact at a population level in terms of reducing morbidity and mortality from CVD. For example, lowering population-wide diastolic BP by only 2 mmHg would be expected to prevent approximately 100 000 myocardial and cerebrovascular events per year in the United States alone(Reference Cook, Cohen and Herbert13).
In contrast to these findings of an apparent beneficial effect of breast milk on later BP in subjects born preterm, at 6-year follow-up of the Promotion of Breastfeeding Intervention Trial (PROBIT) cohort, no significant effect of the intervention on BP was found(Reference Kramer, Matush and Vanilovich14). One interpretation of this finding is that breast milk does not affect later BP in healthy term infants and that the results from previous observational studies suggesting a beneficial effect of breast milk on later BP in this population reflect residual confounding. However, interestingly, other studies in animal models (including baboons) and human subjects have found that effects of early nutrition and growth on later BP, plasma lipids and fatness may not ‘emerge’ until adolescence(Reference Lewis, Bertrand and McMahan15–Reference Owen, Whincup and Odoki17), and an earlier follow-up of the preterm RCT cohort found no effect of early nutrition on BP at 8 years of age(Reference Lucas and Morley18). A third possibility, since the PROBIT study was essentially a trial of ‘some’ v. ‘more’ breast-feeding, is that the separation between the intervention groups in this study in terms of breast-feeding behaviour was insufficient to demonstrate an effect. This possibility is discussed further later in this paper.
Plasma lipid profile
Plasma lipids were measured at 13–15-year follow-up of the preterm RCT(Reference Singhal, Cole and Fewtrell19). The group randomised to human milk either as sole diet or as a supplement to maternal breast milk during the neonatal period had significantly lower concentrations of LDL-cholesterol, apo-B, and a lower LDL:HDL ratio during adolescence, all likely to be favourable changes in terms of later cardiovascular risk. These subjects also had significantly lower levels of the inflammatory marker, C-reactive protein CRP. Once again, there was a dose–response effect with more favourable plasma lipid concentrations in those with the highest neonatal intakes of human milk (P=0·04 for trend for LDL:HDL). Plasma cholesterol is known to track with age(Reference Juhola, Magnussen and Viikari5). The effect size of about a 10% reduction in plasma cholesterol found in this study is very similar to that reported from a meta-analysis of breast-feeding in term infants(Reference Owen, Whincup and Odoki17). In terms of the likely impact on later health, systematic reviews in adults have estimated that a 10% reduction in the concentration of plasma cholesterol in plasma would reduce the incidence of CVD by 25%(Reference Holme20, Reference Law, Wald and Thompson21) and mortality by 13–14%(Reference Gould, Rossouw and Santanello22).
No plasma lipid results are yet available from the PROBIT cohort, although the 10-year follow-up study (currently underway) includes measurement of blood lipids.
Fatness and obesity
Follow-up of the preterm RCT cohort at ages 10(Reference Fewtrell, Prentice and Jones23), 13–15 years(Reference Singhal, Cole and Lucas12, Reference Singhal, Cole and Fewtrell19) and 20 years of age(Reference Fewtrell, Williams and Singhal24) found no significant impact of neonatal diet, including human milk, on body composition. The latter was measured using the in vivo gold standard ‘four component’ model at the 10- and 20-year follow-ups. The 6-year follow-up of the PROBIT cohort also reported no significant differences in weight, BMI, waist or hip circumference and skinfold thicknesses between intervention and control groups(Reference Kramer, Matush and Vanilovich14). However, at 13–15-year follow-up of the preterm trial, subjects randomised to standard diets (donor breast milk or term infant formula) had a significantly lower leptin:fat mass ratio (a measure of leptin resistance) compared with those randomised to the ‘enriched’ diet (preterm infant formula; P<0·05), with an inverse dose–response relationship between neonatal human milk intake and later leptin resistance(Reference Singhal, Farooqi and O'Rahilly25). This finding raises the hypothesis that a lower nutrient diet during the neonatal period, of which human milk is an example, may result in lower leptin resistance that could potentially influence later fatness and obesity risk. However, this requires further investigation with longer follow-up.
How could breast milk feeding reduce the risk of CVD or obesity?
It is relevant to consider potential mechanism(s) for an effect of breast-feeding or breast milk feeding on later cardiovascular health or obesity risk. One possibility is that the effect relates to a specific factor or factors in human milk; for example, one of the many growth factors or hormones present in breast milk but not in infant formulae. However, an alternative explanation that has received considerable research focus is that these effects are mediated by differences in the early growth patterns of breast-fed compared with formula-fed infants with, on average, slower early growth in breast-fed infants. The growth acceleration hypothesis, proposed by Singhal and Lucas(Reference Singhal and Lucas26), proposes that more rapid infant growth (shown by upward centile crossing for weight and/or length) results in an increased risk of later CVD and obesity. In support of their hypothesis, they point out that this phenomenon is observed in a wide variety of animal species, in whom rapid early growth confers short-term benefits for growth and survival but at a cost to the individual's later health or longevity(Reference Metcalfe and Monaghan27). It also explains why the early post-natal period and infant nutrition should be influential, since early nutrition is the main modifiable influence on infant growth, and the first months of life are the period when most catch-up or catch-down growth occurs as the infant adjusts its growth pattern.
This hypothesis is now supported by data from many observational studies. For example, data from more than twenty-seven studies (much of it summarised in systematic reviews(Reference Monteiro and Victora28–Reference Stettler30) suggest that faster weight gain (upward centile crossing for weight) in infancy is associated with a greater risk of long-term obesity. This association has been reported for obesity in adults and children, in both high- and low-income countries, and is consistent for cohorts over the past 80 years. The effect size of infant growth rate on later obesity risk may be substantial, and it has been estimated that up to 20% of the risk of being overweight later in childhood can be attributed to weight gain in the highest quintile in infancy(Reference Stettler30). Data from a smaller number of studies suggest rapid infant growth is associated with higher BP (reviewed in(Reference Singhal, Cole and Fewtrell31, Reference Ben-Shlomo, McCarthy and Highes32)), insulin resistance(Reference Singhal, Fewtrell and Cole33–Reference Soto, Bazes and Pena35), endothelial function(Reference Singhal, Cole and Fewtrell36) and carotid intima-media thickness(Reference Oren, Vos and Uiterwaal37).
The growth acceleration hypothesis is also now supported by data from randomised trials of early nutrition in healthy term infants(Reference Fewtrell, Morley and Abbott38, Reference Koletzko, von Kries and Closa39). Infants randomised to receive growth-promoting, nutrient-enriched formulae (thought at the time the studies were initiated to be beneficial) were found to have higher BP(Reference Singhal, Cole and Fewtrell31) and greater fat mass(Reference Singhal, Kennedy and Lanigan40) at age 5–8 years. Furthermore, in non-randomised analyses, adverse effects on these later health outcomes were clearly related to a faster early growth pattern. Importantly, this association between more rapid infant growth and adverse later outcome was seen in breast-fed infants as well as those fed formulae. Breast-fed infants showed a 25% increase in later fat mass for each one sd increase in weight between birth and 9 months of age(Reference Singhal, Kennedy and Lanigan40). In a randomised trial of high- v. low-protein infant formulae in healthy term infants with normal birthweights, those who received a higher-protein formula showed faster early growth and had significantly higher BMI, with the effect persisting at age 2 years. Infants randomised to receive the lower protein formula had a growth pattern more similar to that of a breast-fed reference group(Reference Koletzko, von Kries and Closa39).
Data from both observational studies and randomised trials are thus consistent with the hypothesis that more rapid early growth, which can be the result of a higher plane of infant nutrition, is causally related to adverse effects on later cardiovascular and obesity risk. As yet, the underlying mechanism for the apparent ‘coupling’ between early growth and later health outcomes is unclear, but suggested mechanisms include effects of early growth on epigenetic ‘marking’, on the set-points of hormonal axes underpinning appetite, satiety and growth, or on fundamental processes relating to ageing (reviewed in(Reference Lanigan and Singhal41)). Much of the mechanistic research in this field has been conducted in animal models although some human data are now available to support all three concepts.
Conclusion
Although regarded as the ‘gold standard’ in terms of demonstrating causality, due to ethical and practical difficulties only two randomised trials have examined the effect of breast-feeding on later cardiovascular health and obesity. One study, in preterm infants, suggests that breast milk has beneficial effects on cardiovascular risk factors measured during adolescence, while the other study, in healthy term infants, has found no such effect up to 6 years of age. There are a number of potential explanations for the discrepancy between the two studies. Firstly, beneficial effects of breast milk on cardiovascular health might be confined to more vulnerable preterm infants. Secondly, effects on cardiovascular outcomes may not manifest until adolescence, a concept supported to some extent by other studies in animals and human subjects. Thirdly, if, as supported by a significant body of literature from animal models, human observational studies and now experimental studies in human infants, the underlying mechanism for the effect of breast milk on later cardiovascular outcome is a slower early growth pattern, it is plausible that the difference in early growth pattern between groups in the PROBIT trial, which essentially compared ‘some’ breast-feeding with ‘more’ breast-feeding, was insufficient to produce a detectable effect on these outcomes.
Acknowledgement
The author declares no conflicts of interest in relation to this review.