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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04929301
Other study ID # STUDY20040354
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date November 21, 2016
Est. completion date July 9, 2018

Study information

Verified date June 2021
Source University of Pittsburgh
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

This was a pilot randomized trial to examine the feasibility and preliminary effectiveness of a structured antenatal milk expression (AME) educational intervention on breastfeeding outcomes within a sample of low-risk pregnant individuals without other children. A convenience sample of 45 participants were enrolled and randomized to either the AME intervention or a control group receiving breastfeeding educational handouts. Both groups met with study staff at 37, 38, 39, and 40 weeks gestation to receive assigned intervention. AME participants practiced AME 1-2 times/day and recorded this in a diary. Data were collected from surveys, interviews, and electronic health record to 3-4 months postpartum.


Description:

Antenatal milk expression (AME) has emerged as a simple, inexpensive, novel method to increase maternal breastfeeding confidence, avoid early formula use, and increase proportion of mother's own milk (MOM) feeds-potentially leading to greater breastfeeding satisfaction, increased breastfeeding duration and exclusivity, and improved maternal-infant health outcomes. AME capitalizes on the production, and sometimes leaking, of milk-commencing during the second trimester of pregnancy by allowing women to collect and store milk for later use if needed and gain confidence in breastfeeding and their milk-making capabilities. AME may also "prime" the hormonal milk production process to create a larger postpartum milk supply. Pilot studies conducted with diabetic women demonstrate AME's safety, feasibility, and preliminary effectiveness in improving breastfeeding rates. AME has yet to be investigated in non-diabetic populations. In the current study, investigators trialed our study procedures and milk collection and analysis methods, and examined the preliminary effectiveness of AME on breastfeeding outcomes among pregnant people without other biological children. Forty-five healthy, nulliparous women were enrolled and randomized to either a structured AME educational intervention or usual care/control group at Magee-Womens Hospital midwife practice at their 34-36 week prenatal appointment. The Principal Investigator (PI) or an research assistant (RA) met with all participants weekly from 37 weeks until delivery, during postpartum hospitalization, and at 1-2 weeks and 3-4 months postpartum. During visits, the PI/RA collected questionnaire data on maternal health and delivery, stress, depression, as well as outcomes of perceived milk supply and breastfeeding attitude, satisfaction, confidence, continuation and exclusivity. Those randomized to AME were taught the technique at the 37 week visit by a lactation consultant, with instructions to continue 1-2 times/day at home. AME was practiced and reinforced with the lactation consultant at each subsequent visit. Those in the control group received breastfeeding handouts at each prenatal visit. For those in the AME group, the PI/RA also collected a small milk sample at each prenatal visit, along with a written diary documenting AME at home. The PI/RA collected a milk sample from all participants at postpartum visits; samples are stored at University of Pittsburgh School of Nursing lab for subsequent analyses (TBD). The PI/RA conducted semi-structured interviews at 1-2 weeks postpartum with AME participants about their experiences with the intervention. Summary statistics were then calculated for feasibility and breastfeeding outcome data, with significance tests (ANOVA, chi-square) to determine group differences breastfeeding outcomes as applicable. Interview data were analyzed for major themes to refine the intervention for a larger trial. Data collected in this study were used to revise our AME clinical teaching protocol, AME diaries, and establish standard operating procedures for milk collection and storage for an ongoing, larger randomized trial examining AME's effect on breastfeeding outcomes.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 45
Est. completion date July 9, 2018
Est. primary completion date July 9, 2018
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender Female
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: 1. Pregnant with a single fetus 2. 34-36 6/7 weeks pregnant (calculated from anticipated due date) 3. No other living children and no prior breastfeeding experience 4. Plan to breastfeed exclusively for at least 4 months 5. At least 18 years old 6. Plan to deliver baby at Magee-Womens Hospital of UPMC 7. Healthy (no major medical or pregnancy condition which would constitute a high-risk pregnancy) Exclusion Criteria: 1. Women with contraindications to breastfeeding, as specified by American Academy of Pediatrics, including HIV+ status, human T-cell lymphotrophic virus, etc. HIV status will be assessed by history (maternal self-report of diagnosis). 2. Conditions known to significantly adversely impact maternal milk supply (e.g., breast hypoplasia, history of breast reduction surgery, as assessed on screening form) 3. Conditions which predispose to preterm labor or otherwise constitute a high-risk pregnancy as outlined by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development including: breech presentation, vaginal bleeding during second or third pregnancy trimester (more than one episode, not related to possible cervical mechanical trauma from sexual intercourse or cervical exam), diagnosed or suspected developmental abnormalities in the fetus, less than 6 months between last birth and the beginning of current pregnancy, placenta previa, diabetes type I or II or gestational diabetes, preeclampsia (or hypertension with proteinuria), smoking, alcohol use, or illicit drug use during pregnancy, oligohydramnios/polyhydramnios, any previous second or third trimester pregnancy loss/miscarriage

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Other:
Antenatal milk expression
Hand-expression of breast milk in pregnancy
Education handouts
Educational breastfeeding handouts

Locations

Country Name City State
United States UPMC Magee Women's Hospital Pittsburgh Pennsylvania

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Pittsburgh American Nurses Foundation

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Proportion of individuals randomized Number of individuals randomized divided by number of individuals screened End date for study recruitment (approximately one year after beginning enrollment)
Primary Proportion of participants completing study Number of participants completing final study survey divided by number enrolled End date for study data collection (approximately one year after beginning enrollment)
Secondary Breastfeeding confidence between group differences in Breastfeeding Self-Efficacy Scale-SF (short form) scores (score range 14-70 with higher scores indicative of higher self-efficacy) Enrollment, postpartum hospitalization: an average of 1-3 days postpartum, 1-2 weeks postpartum, 3-4 months postpartum
Secondary Perceived milk supply (single item) Between group differences in perceived postpartum milk supply assessed as a single investigator-created item asking "Do you feel you make enough breast milk to satisfy your baby?" with answer options of "yes," "no," or "unsure" (no and unsure dichotomized to yes="no PIM" and no/unsure= "PIM") During postpartum hospitalization: an average of 1-3 days postpartum, 1-2 weeks postpartum, 3-4 months postpartum
Secondary Perceived milk supply (scale score) Between group differences in perceived postpartum milk supply assessed as a combined score on both the Perceived Infant Breastfeeding Satiety and Maternal-Infant Breastfeeding Satisfaction subscales (10 items total) within the H&H Lactation Scale; possible scores range from 0-70, wherein lower scores represented lower breastfeeding satisfaction and lower confidence that one was making enough milk. During postpartum hospitalization: an average of 1-3 days postpartum, 1-2 weeks postpartum, 3-4 months postpartum
Secondary In-hospital formula use Between group differences in any formula feeds during birth hospitalization (yes/no) extracted from electronic health record Discharge from birth hospital: an average of 1-3 days postpartum
Secondary Breastfeeding continuation Between group differences in any breastmilk feeds (yes/no) 1-2 weeks postpartum, 3-4 months postpartum
Secondary Breastfeeding exclusivity Between group differences in only breast milk feeds (100% breast milk-yes/no) 1-2 weeks postpartum, 3-4 months postpartum
Secondary Promoters and barriers to antenatal milk collection and storage Qualitative interviews assessing participant perceptions related to collecting and storing antenatal milk 1-2 weeks postpartum
Secondary Proportion of participants completing study visits Number of participants completing each study visit divided by number enrolled Study visits at 37, 38, 39, and 40 weeks of pregnancy
Secondary Proportion of participants engaging in AME Number of participants engaging in AME during study visits and/or independently as documented in AME diary, divided by number of participants assigned to AME End date for participant's pregnancy: an average of 40 gestational weeks with upper range to 42 gestational weeks
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