Diarrhea Clinical Trial
Official title:
Oral Supplement for Pregnant and Lactating Mothers to Promote Infant Immune Maturation and Protection Against Early Life Infections
To assess protection against early life infections through supplementation of mothers during pregnancy to the newborns' growth, morbidity, immune status intra and extra-uterine.
During pregnancy mothers have to fulfill the tremendous physiological needs to support their
own immune status as well as that of their babies. Accordingly, it appears highly valuable
to provide mothers with a nutritional supplement during pregnancy and lactation to promote
the immune development in newborns, thus reinforcing the infants' defenses.
In that respect, an appropriate maternal diet must provide sufficient energy and nutrients
to meet the mother's usual requirements and promote health status, as well as the needs of
the growing fetus and beyond for the neonate.
Key organogenesis steps take place during fetal life and many functional features of the
immune system are already coded in the genetic asset of the individual. However, at birth
the immune system remains fairly immature. An epigenetic, postnatal instruction seems to be
extremely important for the maturation of the immune system allowing its full functionality.
The cross-talk between the mother and her baby is, indeed, crucial for the optimal
development of the foetus and subsequently for the full and functional maturation of the
neonate.
The newborn relies for his protection almost exclusively on his innate immune system that is
initially instructed and educated early in life by factors derived from his mother as well
as post-natal environmental factors such as early life colonization with micro-organisms
that activates the innate immunity and enhance Th1-cell polarization thereby potentially
reducing atopic dermatitis with respect to the hygiene hypothesis.
A large part of this immune education is provided by factors transmitted from the mother
pre-natally through the placenta or post-natally via the breast milk. Breast milk contains a
number of nutrients and bioactive components, including immune cells, maternal antibodies
(mainly secretory IgA), cytokines, growth factors, lactoferrin, nucleotides,
triacylglycerols, fatty acids, oligosaccharides, and vitamins. All together, these
components beneficially impact the health status of the newborn, conferring, among other
functions, immune education and early protection.
A typical example of such transfer of immune competence is the TGF-β that could be
transmitted in active from either through the placenta or absorbed by the neonates through
the milk. This TGF-β is an important IgA switch factor and this is likely to be responsible,
in part, for the capacity of breast-fed infant to produce higher levels of mucosal SIgA
compared to non-breast fed infants. Moreover, milk soluble CD14 transmitted to the newborn
contributes to prime the neonatal gut to modulate the microbial recognition and
establishment of endogenous microbiota.
Diarrhea episodes are major manifestation of common infant infections of viral or bacterial
aetiology and are a key health concern in paediatrics. As mentioned above there are
evidences that some probiotic strains significantly improve diarrheal outcomes in infants,
particularly rotavirus diarrhea. In that respect diarrhea occurrence was selected as the
primary outcome in the present trial.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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