Observational study of cytomegalovirus from breast milk and necrotising enterocolitis

Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed. 2019 Jul 20;105(3):259-265. doi: 10.1136/archdischild-2018-316613. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the relationship between cytomegalovirus (CMV) exposure from breast milk and risk of necrotising enterocolitis (NEC).

Design: Secondary analysis of a multicentre, observational cohort study. Maternal breast milk and infant serum or urine were serially evaluated by nucleic acid testing at scheduled intervals for CMV. Infants with evidence of congenital infection were excluded. Competing-risks Cox models, with adjustment for confounders, were used to evaluate the relationship between breast milk CMV exposure or postnatal CMV infection and NEC.

Setting: Three neonatal intensive care units in Atlanta, Georgia.

Patients: Infants with a birth weight≤1500 grams.

Exposures: Maximal CMV viral load in breast milk in the first 14 days after birth or postnatal CMV infection. Two different approaches were used to assess the timing of onset of CMV infection (midpoint or early).

Main outcome measures: NEC, defined as Bell stage II or greater.

Results: Among 596 enrolled infants, 457 (77%) were born to CMV seropositive mothers and 33 developed postnatal CMV infection (cumulative incidence 7.3%, 95% CI 5.0% to 10.1%). The incidence of NEC was 18% (6/33) among infants with CMV infection, compared with 7% (37/563) among infants without infection (adjusted cause-specific HR (CSHR): 2.81; 95% CI 0.73 to 10.9 (midpoint); 6.02; 95% CI 1.28 to 28.4 (early)). Exposure to higher breast milk CMV viral load was associated with a higher risk of NEC (adjusted CSHR per twofold increase 1.28; 95% CI 1.06 to 1.54).

Conclusions: CMV exposure from breast milk may be associated with the development of NEC in very low birth weight infants.

Keywords: infant feeding; neonatology.