Preterm Birth: A Narrative Review of the Current Evidence on Nutritional and Bioactive Solutions for Risk Reduction
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. The Role of Nutrition in Reducing the Risk of PTB
3.1.1. Evidence from Dietary Pattern Analyses
3.1.2. Nutrient-Based Interventions
Omega 3 Fatty Acids
Other Macro and Micronutrients
3.2. Role of Probiotics in Reducing the Risk for PTB
3.2.1. Probiotic Intervention studies
3.2.2. The effect of Oral Probiotics on PTB Rates
3.2.3. The Effect of Vaginal Probiotics on Outcomes Related to PTB
3.2.4. Ongoing Probiotic Studies
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Ref. | Study | Ingredient, Daily Dosage | Main Results | Comments | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Objective | Design | Population/Sample Size | Duration | ||||
Carlson et al. 2013 [76] | To assess if DHA supplementation can increase maternal and newborn DHA status, gestation duration, birth weight, and length | RCT, DB, PC. | Healthy pregnant women between 8 and 20 weeks of gestation from the USA, n = 350 | <20 weeks of gestation until delivery | Intervention: 3 capsules/day of a marine algae-oil source of DHA (600 mg DHA/day) Placebo: 3 capsules containing half soybean and half corn oil | Compared to placebo, DHA supplementation resulted in: (1) Longer gestation duration (2.9 day; p = 0.041). (2) Fewer infants born <34 weeks of gestation (p = 0.025). EPTB reduced by 87.5%. (3) Shorter hospital stays for PT infants (40.8 compared with 8.9 day; p = 0.026). (4) Similar PTB incidence between groups, with more EPTB in the placebo group (4.8% vs. 0.6%, p = 0.025). (5) Greater birth weight (172 g; p = 0.004), length (0.7 cm; p = 0.022), and head circumference (0.5 cm; p = 0.012). (6) Higher maternal and cord Red Blood Cell-phospholipid-DHA (2.6%; p < 0.001). | Women taking supplements <300 mg DHA/day were not excluded. Dietary n−3 LC-PUFA intakes were not assessed Many secondary variables were studied but without adjustment for multiple comparisons. Incidence of PTB and EPTB were secondary outcomes. |
Makrides et al. 2010 [77] | To assess if DHA supplementation during the last half of pregnancy has a beneficial effect on maternal depressive symptoms and child neurodevelopment | RCT, DB, PC. | Healthy pregnant women <21 weeks gestation from Australia n = 2399 | <21 weeks of gestation until delivery | Intervention: 3 capsules/day of DHA-rich fish oil concentrate (800 mg DHA/day A + 100 mg EPA/day) Placebo: 3 capsules/day of vegetable oil containing a blend of rapeseed, Sunflower, and palm oil | Compared to placebo, DHA+EPA supplementation resulted in (1) No differences in the rate of women with depressive symptoms, as well as the cognitive and language composite scores of their children. (2) A small to modest increase in the duration of gestation (precise estimate of effect size could not be determined due to obstetric interventions). (3) Fewer infants born <34 weeks gestation (1.09 % vs. 2.25% adjusted Relative Risk (RR), 0.49; p = 0.03), and association with fewer low birth weight infants and fewer admissions to neonatal intensive care. EPTB was reduced by 51.6%. | Dietary intake of n-3 LC-PUFAs was not assessed. The study failed to demonstrate an improvement in primary outcomes such as reduction in depressive symptoms among women and improvement in cognitive and language scores of their children. |
Ramakrishnan et al. 2010 [78] | To assess if prenatal DHA supplementation increases gestational age and birth size | RCT, DB, PC. | Healthy pregnant women from 18 to 22 weeks of gestation from Mexico n = 1094 | From 18 to 22 weeks of gestation until delivery | Intervention: 2 capsules/day of 200 mg of DHA derived from an algal source (400 mg DHA/day) Placebo: 2 capsules/day containing olive oil | Compared to placebo, DHA supplementation resulted in (1) No differences in mean gestational age, PTB, weight, length and head circumference at birth. | |
Helland et al. 2001 [79] | To evaluate the effect of n-3 or n-6 long-chain PUFAs on birth weight, gestational length, and infant development | RCT, DB, PC. | Healthy, nulli- or primiparous women in weeks 17 to 19 of pregnancy from Norway n = 590 | 17 to 19 weeks of gestation until 3 months after delivery | Intervention: 10 mL/day of cod liver oil, providing around 2 g daily of the long chain omega-3 fatty acids. Placebo: 10 mL/day of corn oil, providing around 5 g daily of omega-6 fatty acid linoleic acid. | In comparison with placebo, cod liver oil supplementation resulted in (1) No differences in gestational length or birth weight, length or head circumference. (2) Higher concentrations of n-3 fatty acids EPA, DHA, and DHA in umbilical plasma phospholipids. (3) Neonates with high concentration of DHA in umbilical plasma phospholipids (upper quartile) had longer gestational length than those with low concentration (lower quartile; 282.5 (8.5) vs. 275.4 (9.3) days). | Substantial numbers of women excluded from the two groups post randomization due to withdrawals. It does not mention gestational lengths to facilitate undertaking of an ITT analyses. In this population, baseline intake of long-chain n-3 fatty acids was estimated to be relatively high (0.5 g/day) and less than one 1% had a PTB. |
Olsen et al. 2000 [80] | To test the preventive effects of dietary n-3 fatty acids on Pre-term delivery, Intrauterine growth retardation, and pregnancy-induced hypertension | Multicenter RCT, PC (4 prophylactic + 2 therapeutic trials) | High risk pregnancies from 19 hospitals in 7 different countries in Europe Four prophylactic trials: previous pre-term (n = 232), IUGR (n = 280), PIH (n = 386) and twin pregnancies (n = 579) Two therapeutic trials: threatening pre-eclampsia (n = 79) and suspected IUGR (n = 63) | From ~20 weeks (prophylactic trials) or 33 weeks (therapeutic trials) until delivery. | Intervention: prophylactic trials (4 capsules/day of fish oil, 1.3 g EPA and 0.9 g DHA) and therapeutic trials (9 capsules/day of fish oil, 2.9 g EPA and 2.1g DHA) (32% EPA, 23% DHA, 2 mg tocopherol/mL) Placebo: identical looking capsules of olive oil (72% oleic acid, 12% linoleic acid) | Compared to placebo, fish oil supplementation resulted in the following among women with a previous Pre-term delivery in the prophylactic trial: (1) Reduced recurrence risk of PTB from 33% to 21% (Odds Ratio (OR) 0.54 (95% Confidence Interval (CI) 0.30–0.98)) (2) Reduced recurrence risk of EPTB from 13.3% to 4.6% (OR 0.32 (95% CI 0.11–0.89)). (3) Longer mean gestational length by 8.5 day (95% CI 1.9–15.2. (4) No effect on PTB in twin pregnancies. | |
Onwude et al. 1995 [81] | To determine whether n-3 fatty acid (EPA/DHA) prophylaxis is beneficial in high-risk pregnancies | RCT, DB, PC. | Pregnant women at high risk of developing PIH and asymmetrical IUGR from an antenatal clinic from UK n = 233 | From around 25 weeks of gestation until 38 weeks of gestation | Intervention: 9 capsules/day of fish oil providing 2.7 g omega-3 fatty acids/day (1.62 g of EPA and 1.08 g of DHA) Placebo: matching air-filled capsules | Compared to placebo, fish oil supplementation resulted in (1) No difference in the duration of gestation or other outcomes such as proteinuric PIH, non-proteinuric PIH, or birth weight within the lowest 3% on the growth charts. | This study failed to support the hypothesis that fish oil supplementation improved pregnancy outcome in an at risk population for impaired fetal growth or PIH. |
Bulstra Ramakers et al. 1995 [82] | To study the effects of adding 3 g/day of EPA to the diet, on recurrence rate of IUGR and PIH in a high-risk population | RCT, DB, PC. | Pregnant women with a history of IUGR with or without PIH in the previous pregnancy from the Netherlands n = 63 | From 12 to 14 weeks of gestation until delivery | Intervention: 4 capsules 3 times daily, which corresponded to a daily dose of 3 g of EPA Placebo: Identical capsules with coconut oil | Compared to placebo, EPA supplementation resulted in (1) No difference in the rates of PTB | No information was provided about content of DHA No estimate of mean gestational length was provided |
Olsen et al. 1992 [83] | To study the effect of a fish-oil supplement, a control olive-oil supplement, and no supplementation on pregnancy duration, birthweight, and birth length | RCT | Healthy pregnant women from Denmark n = 533 | From gestation week 30 until delivery | Intervention: Four 1 g fish oil capsules/day containing 2.7 g n-3 fatty acids- 32% EPA, 23% DHA, 2 mg tocopherol Placebo: Four 1 g olive oil capsules/day No supplement group | Compared to placebo fish oil supplementation resulted in: (1) The highest mean length of gestation when all 3 groups were compared in a single analysis (fish oil, olive oil and no supplement: 283, 279.4 and 281.7 days respectively, p = 0.006). (2) On an average 4 days longer pregnancies in the fish-oil group compared to the olive oil group (95% CI: 1.5–6.4, p = 0.005). (3) The effect seemed to depend on the baseline intake of fish. -Among those 20% of the women who had the highest intake of fish at randomization, no difference could be detected between the oil groups. -In those 20% who had the lowest intake for fish, a difference of 7.4 days was observed (95% CI 2.2–12.6 days, p = 0.01). -In the middle 60%, the groups differed by 4.8 days (95 CI 1.8–7.8, p = 0.005). | Maternal baseline dietary intake could explain differences in the duration of gestation and higher intakes may have a saturating effect |
Mardones et al. 2008 [84] | To study the effect of maternal food fortification with omega-3 fatty acids and multiple micronutrients on birth weight and gestation duration | Non-blinded, RCT, PC. | Healthy pregnant women up to 20 weeks Gestation from Chile n = 972 | From up to 20 weeks of gestation until delivery | Intervention: 2 kg/month of powdered milk fortified with multiple micronutrients and both a-linolenic acid and linoleic acid; iron was supplied in an amino-chelated form Placebo: 2 kg/month powdered milk fortified with small amounts of iron sulphate, copper, zinc, and vitamin C. | Based on ITT analyses and in comparison with placebo, the intervention resulted in (1) Lower incidence of EPTB (0.4% vs. 2.1%; crude OR (95% CI): 5.26 (1.08–34.90), p = 0.02). (2) Increase in gestation duration (1.40 days difference, 95% CI: -0.02–2.82 d, p = 0.05). (3) Higher mean birth weight (65.4 g difference, 95% CI: 5–126 g; p = 0.03). (4) Higher infant length (0.37 cm difference, 95% CI: 0.06–0.68 cm, p = 0.019). | Impossibility to perform a blinded design and have strict control of compliance with the prescribed amounts of the products taken to the homes of the study subjects Slight difference in gestational age at recruitment Associations with gestation duration would need a larger sample size for confirmation (the statistical power reached only 0.61 in ITT analyses) |
Smuts et al. 2003 [85] | To assess whether higher intake of DHA would increase duration of gestation and birth weight in US women | RCT, DB, PC. | Healthy pregnant women between the 24th and 28th week of pregnancy from the US (predominant black population) n = 291 | From 24–28 weeks of gestation until delivery | Intervention: 1 DHA enriched egg/day (133 mg DHA) Placebo: 1 ordinary egg/day (33 mg DHA) | Compared to the placebo group, the supplementation with DHA-enriched egg resulted in (1) Increased duration of gestation (6.0 ± 2.3 days, p = 0.009) (based on analyses adjusted for maternal BMI at enrollment and number of prior pregnancies). | The unadjusted analysis showed a difference of 2.6 days (not statistically significant), while adjustment for maternal BMI at enrollment and number of prior pregnancies resulted in an increased duration of gestation by 6 days. The adjustments may have introduced a post hoc element into the interpretation of the result. |
Ref. | Study | Ingredient, Daily Dose | Main Results | Comments | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Objective | Design | Population/Sample Size | Duration | ||||
Gille et al. 2016 [145] | To assess whether probiotic supplementation with Lactobacillus rhamnosus GR-1 and Lactobacillus reuteri RC-14 can improve maternal vaginal microbiota | RCT, DB, PC | Healthy pregnant women (first trimester) from Germany, n = 320, 2010–2012 | 8 weeks to assess Nugent scores; entire pregnancy for PTB (secondary outcome) | Capsules with 109 CFU, once daily | Compared to placebo, DHA supplementation resulted in No effect on vaginal microbiota (improvement in Nugent scores). No effect on PTB rates. | Low rate of preterm of 4% Very low rate of bacterial vaginosis 3%. Trend increase on miscarriages in treated (7.7% vs. 3.1%, p = 0.08). |
Luoto et al. 2010 [146] | To assess whether dietary counselling and probiotic supplementation with (Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG and Bifidobacterium lactis Bb12) can improve pregnancy outcomes | RCT, PC 3 groups: (1) Probiotics and dietary counselling vs. (2) Placebo and dietary counselling (DB); (3) Placebo without dietary counselling (SB) | Healthy pregnant women in the first trimester from Finland, n = 256, late 1990s | From the first antenatal visit to the end of pregnancy | Capsules with 1010 CFU, once daily | Compared to placebo, probiotic supplementation resulted in 1. No effect on PTB rate.2. No effect on duration of gestation. | Very low rate of PTB: 1.7%. |
Kraus Silva 2011 et al. [143] | To assess whether probiotic supplementation with (L. rhamnosus GR-1 and L. reuteri RC-14) can reduce BV and PTB | RCT, DB, PC | Pregnant women (8 to 20 weeks gestation), With asymptomatic BV: Vaginal pH >4.5, Nugent >4 from Brazil n = 644 randomized, late 1990s | <20 weeks gestation to 24 or 26 weeks | Capsules with 106 colony-forming units each, twice daily | Compared to placebo, probiotics supplementation resulted in no effect on PTB rate. However, the PTB rates were lower with treatment (ITT: 1.6%, 5 in 304; vs. 3.3% 10 in 301) | Low rate of PTB 2.5% Low probiotics dose Exclusion criteria were very broad: previous history of PTB, hypertension, diabetes, asthma, cervical incompetence, atypical vaginal bleeding, atypical vaginal secretion, HPV, gonorrhea, syphilis, dysuria, pruritus, burning, corticotherapy, recent antibiotic therapy (within 8 weeks prior to screening) |
Rautava et al. 2012 [148] | The effect of maternal administration of probiotics on atopic disease in infants. | RCT, DB, PC. | Pregnant women with atopic sensitization and either a history of or active allergic disease from Finland n = 241 | Probiotics given to the mother 8 weeks before and 8 weeks after delivery. | (1) Dietary food supplement with Lactobacillus rhamnosus LPR + Bifidobacterium longum NCC 3001 (109 CFU/day) (2) Dietary food supplement with Lactobacillus paracasei ST11 + NCC 3001 (19 CFU/day) (3) Placebo | No information on preterm birth rates. Gestational age in all groups was 39 weeks with a similar range (34–41 weeks). | Not possible to draw firm conclusions about effects on preterm delivery. However, papers seems to suggest lack of effect because gestational ages were similar between groups. |
Kim et al. 2010 [157] | The effect of maternal and infant administration of probiotics on atopic disease in infants | RCT, DB, PC. | Pregnant women with a family history of allergic diseases day n = 112, and their infants. from Korea | Probiotic was given to mothers from 8 weeks before delivery until 3 months post-delivery, then to infants from 4 months until 6 months | (1) Bifido Inc mix (Bifidobacterium bifidum BGN4, Bifidobacterium lactis AD011, Lactobacillus acidophilus AD030), 1.6 × 109 CFU/day each, in powder (2) Placebo powder (maltodextrin and alpha-corn) | Infants delivered before 36 weeks were excluded. No difference observed in the number of infants removed between the two groups, suggesting no difference in PTB rates. In both groups the gestational ages were around 40 weeks, and birth weights were similar. | Not possible to draw conclusions about effects on PTB. However, papers seems to suggest lack of effect. |
Ou et al. 2012 [158] | The effect of maternal administration of probiotics on atopic disease in infants | RCT, DB, PC | Pregnant women with atopic diseases history and Total IgE >100 kU/L from Taiwan n = 191 | From 24 weeks gestation until delivery. After delivery, administration was exclusively to breastfeeding mothers | (1) L. rhamnosus GG (Valio, ATCC 53103) 1010 CFU/ day (2) Placebo (microcrystalline cellulose) | PTB rates were not reported. However, gestational age was 39 weeks in both groups (range 31–41 weeks in the L. rhamnosus GG group and 35–41 weeks in placebo group), which suggests lack of efficacy on PTB rates. | The study suggests that L. rhamnosus GG probably has no impact on PTB rates. |
Vitali et al. 2012 [159] | The effect of probiotic supplementation during late pregnancy on vaginal microbiota and cytokine secretion | Non-randomized, controlled, pilot | Healthy pregnant women with no symptoms of vaginal or urinary tract infection from Italy n = 27 | Probiotic was given during weeks 32–37 of gestation. | (1) Probiotic group: one sachet of VSL #3 (Lactobacillus acidophilus, Lactobacillus plantarum, Lactobacillus casei, Lactobacillus delbrueckii ssp. bulgaricus, Bifidobacterium breve, Bifidobacterium longum, Bifidobacterium infantis, S. salivaris ssp. thermophilus) (n = 12) 9 × 1011 total CFU/day (2) Control group: no supplementation (n = 12) | PTB rates were not reported, but the gestational ages were not different between the two groups. This suggests that the probiotic did had no effect on PTB rates. No significant changes were found in the amounts of the principal vaginal bacterial populations in women administered with VSL#3, but qPCR results suggested a potential role of the probiotic product in counteracting the decrease of Bifidobacterium and the increase of Atopobium, that occurred in control women during late pregnancy. Incidence of vaginal infections was not reported. | The study is too small to draw conclusions, but it did not show any effect of VSL3 on gestational age. |
Stojanovic et al. 2012 [154] | The effect of probiotics on vaginal microflora, cervical length, cervical consistency, and fetal positioning. | Observational, randomized, prospective | Pregnant women | Probiotic was administered for 12 weeks during pregnancy | (1) untreated arm of the study (n = 30) (2) vaginal application of one tablet containing L. rhamnosus BMX 54 (Normogin™-(n = 30) once a week | No data on PTB rates as women were not followed until delivery. Increase in pathogenic microorganisms in the vaginal and/or cervical swabs of untreated women (p <0.05), also in average pH values (p <0.05), amount (p <0.05) and “whiff test” positivity (p <0.05) of vaginal discharge. Significant trend was also found for decrease in length (p <0.0001) and increase in dilatation (p <0.05) of cervix, as well as for lower position of the fetus (p <0.0001). In the group treated with L. rhamnosus BMX 54, none of these values significantly changed throughout the observation period, with the exception of cervical length that was significantly decreased at T3 (p <0.01). | Cannot conclude on PTB rates. However, it suggests that vaginally administered probiotic had a positive impact on parameters associated with PTB. |
Nutrient | Evidence for Efficacy | Dose | Duration | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
n−3 LC-PUFA (combinations of EPA and DHA) | 26–61% reduction in the risk of early PTB | DHA: 133 to 2100 mg DHA/day EPA: 100 to 3000 mg EPA/day | Supplementation started between 12 to 30 weeks of gestation | Eight trials supplementing either DHA or EPA alone or using varying combinations of both (five trials in healthy pregnancies and three in at-risk pregnancies), two food-based interventions and 6 meta-analyses |
DHA (predominantly DHA) | 51.6% to 87.5% reduction in the risk of early PTB (<34 weeks) | 600 to 800 mg DHA/day | Supplementation started <20 to 21 weeks of gestation | Two large RCTs available where PTB and EPTB were secondary outcomes and not the primary outcome. |
Zinc | 14% reduction in PTB | 5 mg/day to 44 mg/day | Supplementations started from as early as before conception (one study) to at least starting before 26 weeks | Most studies were conducted in low income countries among women with poor nutritional status and likely to have low zinc concentrations. The reduction in PTB was not accompanied by reduction in LBW or a difference in the gestational age at birth. |
Vitamin D | 64% reduction in PTB | 400 to 1000 IU/day (two trials), 60000–12000 IU (depending on baseline serum 25 (OH)D (one trial) cholecalciferol D3 | Supplementation started between 20–30 weeks of gestation | The trials available were all of low quality. |
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Samuel, T.M.; Sakwinska, O.; Makinen, K.; Burdge, G.C.; Godfrey, K.M.; Silva-Zolezzi, I. Preterm Birth: A Narrative Review of the Current Evidence on Nutritional and Bioactive Solutions for Risk Reduction. Nutrients 2019, 11, 1811. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11081811
Samuel TM, Sakwinska O, Makinen K, Burdge GC, Godfrey KM, Silva-Zolezzi I. Preterm Birth: A Narrative Review of the Current Evidence on Nutritional and Bioactive Solutions for Risk Reduction. Nutrients. 2019; 11(8):1811. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11081811
Chicago/Turabian StyleSamuel, Tinu M., Olga Sakwinska, Kimmo Makinen, Graham C. Burdge, Keith M. Godfrey, and Irma Silva-Zolezzi. 2019. "Preterm Birth: A Narrative Review of the Current Evidence on Nutritional and Bioactive Solutions for Risk Reduction" Nutrients 11, no. 8: 1811. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11081811