faculty

Publications

Maternal nutritional status and milk volume and composition in India: an observational study.

Groups and Associations Young, Melissa F.; Faerber, Emily C.; Mehta, Rukshan V.; Ranjan, Samriddhi; Shetty, Sweekruthi A.; Ramakrishnan, Usha; Rangiah, Kannan; Bose, Beena; Devi, Sarita; Dwarkanath, Pratibha; Kurpad, Anura V.; Taneja, Sunita; Martorell, Reynaldo
The American journal of clinical nutrition 2023

BACKGROUND: Human milk provides essential nutrition for infants, and its benefits are well established. We lack data on the influence of maternal nutritional  status on milk volume and composition in low-middle income countries. OBJECTIVE:  We aimed to 1) assess lactation performance (human milk volume, macronutrient  composition, and infant energy intake) in Indian females and 2) examine the  associations between maternal anthropometry (BMI, percentage body fat) and  lactation performance. METHODS: We conducted an observational study among 232  mother-infant dyads, 2 to 4 mo postpartum in Haryana, India. We used deuterium  oxide dose-to-mother technique to measure milk volume and maternal percentage  body fat and collected human milk samples to determine macronutrient and energy  concentrations. Adjusted multiple linear regression models were used to examine  the associations between maternal anthropometry and lactation performance.  RESULTS: The mean BMI and percentage body fat of mothers were 21.7 ± 3.6 kg/m(2)  and 29.5 ± 7.7, respectively. Milk volume and macronutrient composition were  similar to the reference values (means ± standard deviations: milk volume, 724 ±  184 mL/d; median (25th, 75th percentile); protein, 9.9 (8.3, 11.7) g/L; fat, 41.0  ± 15.2 g/L; energy density, 0.71 ± 0.14 kcal/g; lactose, 65.5 (55.3, 71.3) g/L).  Maternal BMI and percentage body fat were not significantly associated with  macronutrient composition. Both maternal BMI and percentage body fat were  negatively associated with milk volume (-7.0, 95% CI: -12.4, -1.6 mL/d; -3.5, 95%  CI: -6.0, -1.1mL/d, respectively) but there were no effects on the total energy  intake of infants after adjusting for covariates. CONCLUSION: Most mothers had a  normal BMI and milk of similar composition and volume to reference values. Future  work in populations with a greater burden of underweight and/or obesity are  needed to examine the underlying mechanisms between maternal body composition and  milk volume. This trial was registered at The Clinical Trials Registry- India as  CTRI/2017/01/007636.