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Multisensory Early Oral Administration of Human Milk (M-MILK) for Very Preterm Infants
Sponsor: Loyola University
Summary
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if the multisensory early oral administration of human milk (M-MILK) intervention helps infants who are born younger than 32 weeks gestational age (very preterm infants). The main question that this clinical trial aims to answer is: Does M-MILK improve stress regulation, support optimal neurodevelopment, and promote competent oral feeding skills in very preterm infants? Researchers will compare M-MILK to the standard of care to see if M-MILK helps very preterm infants. Specifically, researchers will compare the differences in: * Cortisol levels * DNA methylation of the two stress related genes (NR3C1 and HSD11B2) * Neurodevelopment * Oral feeding skills Participants in the M-MILK group will receive standard of care plus M-MILK intervention, which starts on day 3 of life and continues until they begin their oral feeding. M-MILK will be provided by clinical research nurses, during the day shift, up to 4 times a day. Participants in the standard of care group will continue to receive their usual care.
Official title: Randomized Controlled Trial of Multisensory Early Oral Administration of Human Milk (M-MILK) for Very Preterm Infants: Enhancing Stress Regulation, Neurodevelopment, and Oral Feeding Skills
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
23 Weeks - 32 Weeks
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
125
Start Date
2025-11-03
Completion Date
2031-05-31
Last Updated
2026-01-20
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Multisensory early oral administration of human milk
M-MILK is implemented starting on day 3 of life, during the day shift, after every hands-on care, during the beginning of a full gavage feeding, and up to 4 times a day. Infants receive M-MILK in small droplets via a 1-ml syringe. M-MILK will cease upon oral feeding initiation. Infants will receive either mother's own milk or donor's milk based on availability. Infants may receive up to 1 mL of milk each time based on their cues and responses. The 1 mL volume intake is included as part of their oral caloric intake. M-MILK is provided by research nurses or parents.
Locations (2)
Loyola University Chicago
Maywood, Illinois, United States
Loyola University Medical Center
Maywood, Illinois, United States