Outcomes after intranasal human milk therapy in preterm infants with intraventricular hemorrhage

J Perinatol. 2024 Oct 9. doi: 10.1038/s41372-024-02147-3. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Objective: Intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH) is a common cause of brain injury in preterm infants. Fresh human milk (HM) contains stem cells (SCs) that could potentially be delivered via intranasal HM (IHM). In this IHM pilot study, we describe outcomes.

Study design: Infants <33 weeks gestation with IVH were given IHM until maximum 28 days of age. Short-term neurologic outcomes and follow-up testing were compared to historic HM-fed infants. Longitudinal outcomes were plotted using linear mixed models. Weighted G-computation quantified treatment effects. Propensity score models calculated inverse probability weights for IVH grade, gestational age, and sex.

Result: 37 infants (35.1% grade 3-4 IVH) were compared to 191 historic controls (17.8% grade 3-4 IVH). Post-hemorrhagic ventricular dilatation was common (25.7% IHM patients). Most weighted outcomes, although not significant, favored IHM at 4-12 and 18 months corrected age.

Conclusion: This phase 1 study suggests powered trials of IHM for brain injury are needed. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRY NAME: clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT04225286.

Associated data

  • ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT04225286