Growth outcomes in preterm neonates receiving human milk fortifiers versus donor milk in a tertiary care hospital: A hospital-based prospective comparative study.
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.51168/16jpvk90Keywords:
Donor milk, growth outcome, human milk fortifier, neonate, preterm, tertiary care hospitalAbstract
Background
Preterm neonates have increased nutritional needs and are at risk of extrauterine growth restriction during neonatal intensive care. Human milk is preferred for enteral feeding; however, unfortified human milk and donor milk alone do not always provide adequate protein, energy, minerals, and micronutrients for optimal postnatal growth.
Objectives: To compare growth outcomes, feeding tolerance, and selected clinical outcomes among preterm neonates receiving human milk with fortifier supplementation versus donor milk in a tertiary care hospital.
Methods
This hospital-based prospective comparative study included 100 preterm neonates admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit and selected by consecutive sampling. Fifty neonates received human milk with fortifier supplementation, and 50 received donor milk as per routine unit feeding protocols. Baseline characteristics, anthropometric growth, feeding tolerance, neonatal morbidities, hospital stay, and discharge nutritional status were compared.
Results
Baseline characteristics were comparable between the human milk fortifier and donor milk groups, including gestational age (31.4 ± 1.8 versus 31.2 ± 1.9 weeks; p=0.59), birth weight (1328 ± 226 versus 1346 ± 238 g; p=0.70), male sex (56.0% versus 52.0%; p=0.69), and small-for-gestational-age status (18.0% versus 22.0%; p=0.62). Neonates receiving human milk fortifier showed earlier regain of birth weight (9.4 ± 2.7 versus 11.6 ± 3.3 days; p<0.001), higher daily weight gain (17.9 ± 3.8 versus 14.5 ± 3.6 g/kg/day; p<0.001), greater length gain (0.93 ± 0.22 versus 0.76 ± 0.20 cm/week; p<0.001), greater head circumference gain (0.78 ± 0.18 versus 0.64 ± 0.17 cm/week; p<0.001), and higher discharge weight (1835 ± 246 versus 1698 ± 235 g; p=0.005). Feed intolerance, necrotizing enterocolitis, late-onset sepsis, hospital stay, and mortality were not significantly different.
Conclusion
Human milk fortifier supplementation was associated with better short-term growth without increasing major complications.
Recommendations
Structured fortification protocols should be adopted with regular anthropometric monitoring and individualized feeding review.
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Copyright (c) 2026 Dr. Shaik Mabbul, Dr. Maddula Ashok, Dr. Sri Harsha Thatikonda (Author)

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