Infant Feeding and Weight Gain: Separating Breast Milk From Breastfeeding and Formula From Food

Meghan B. Azad(University of London), Lorena Vehling(Children's Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba), Deborah Chan(Children's Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba), Annika Klopp(Children's Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba), Nathan Nickel(Manitoba Health), Jonathan McGavock(Children's Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba), Allan B. Becker(Children's Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba), Piush J. Mandhane(University of Alberta), Stuart E. Turvey(University of British Columbia), Theo J. Moraes(University of Toronto), Mark Taylor(University of London), Diana L. Lefebvre(McMaster University), Malcolm R. Sears(McMaster University), Padmaja Subbarao(University of Toronto), on behalf of the CHILD Study Investigators
PEDIATRICS
September 24, 2018
Cited by 220

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Studies addressing breastfeeding and obesity rarely document the method of breast milk feeding, type of supplementation, or feeding in hospital. We investigated these practices in the CHILD birth cohort. METHODS: scores (BMIzs) were measured at 12 months. Analyses controlled for maternal BMI and other confounders. RESULTS: Among 2553 mother-infant dyads, 97% initiated breastfeeding, and the median breastfeeding duration was 11.0 months. Most infants (74%) received solids before 6 months. Among "exclusively breastfed" infants, 55% received some expressed breast milk, and 27% briefly received formula in hospital. Compared with exclusive direct breastfeeding at 3 months, all other feeding styles were associated with higher BMIzs: adjusted β: +.12 (95% confidence interval [CI]: .01 to .23) for some expressed milk, +.28 (95% CI: .16 to .39) for partial breastfeeding, and +.45 (95% CI: .30 to .59) for exclusive formula feeding. Brief formula supplementation in hospital did not alter these associations so long as exclusive breastfeeding was established and sustained for at least 3 months. Formula supplementation by 6 months was associated with higher BMIzs (adjusted β: +.25; 95% CI: .13 to .38), whereas supplementation with solid foods was not. Results were similar for weight gain velocity. CONCLUSIONS: Breastfeeding is inversely associated with weight gain velocity and BMI. These associations are dose dependent, partially diminished when breast milk is fed from a bottle, and substantially weakened by formula supplementation after the neonatal period.


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