Am J Clin Nutr 2007 Fewtrell 635S 8S
Am J Clin Nutr 2007 Fewtrell 635S 8S
Am J Clin Nutr 2007 Fewtrell 635S 8S
KEY WORDS
Infants, breastfeeding, complementary feeding, World Health Organization, public health
INTRODUCTION
In recent years, the focus of infant nutrition research has fundamentally shifted in emphasis because of increasing animal and
human evidence that early nutrition in this vulnerable period of
life has profound biological effects and important consequences
for both short- and long-term health. Scientific research on the
effects of early nutrition has largely focused on human milk
feeding and experimentally designed milk-based artificial feeds.
Surprisingly little research has been done on the introduction of
solid foods and whether this period of significant dietary change
has biological and health effects in the short term and, more
DEFINITIONS
The World Health Organization (WHO) describes the complementary feeding period as The period during which other
foods or liquids are provided along with breast milk. . . . Any
nutrient-containing foods or liquids other than breast milk given
to young children during the period of complementary feeding
are defined as complementary foods (1). Thus, breast milk substitutes including cow milk infant formula and follow-on formula
are defined as a complementary food (CF) to emphasize and
encourage breastfeeding.
We are in a period of transition in the use of common terms
associated with infant feeding practices. Many working in the
field of human nutrition are still using the term weaning. Because
this term can be used in certain societies to indicate the complete
cessation of breastfeeding, the WHO recommends that the terms
weaning and weaning foods be avoided, and we endorse this
view. The term weaning should be replaced by the term complementary feeding. Meanwhile, for the sake of clarity in this discussion, solid food is used to replace weaning foods.
Before 2001, the WHO global recommendation was that infants be exclusively breastfed for between 4 and 6 mo before the
introduction of complementary foods (2). On 18 May 2001, the
World Health Assembly urged Member States to promote breastfeeding for 6 mo as a global public health recommendation (3).
This resolution followed a 2001 report by a WHO Expert Consultation on the optimal duration of exclusive breastfeeding (4).
1
From the MRC Childhood Nutrition Research Centre, Institute of Child
Health, London, United Kingdom (MSF and AL); the School of Biomedical
and Molecular Sciences, University of Surrey, Guildford, United Kingdom
(JBM); the Clinical Nutrition Service, Division of GI/Nutrition, Childrens
Hospital, Boston, MA (CD); the Center for Child Health Services, Reykjavk,
Iceland (GG); the Clinical Research Institute, Tufts New England Medical
Center, Boston, MA (PLH); and the Department of Pediatrics, Massachusetts
General Hospital, Boston, MA (REK).
2
Presented at the conference Maternal Nutrition and Optimal Infant
Feeding Practices, held in Houston, TX, February 2324, 2006.
3
Address reprint requests to RE Kleinman, Pediatric Gastrointestinal and
Nutrition Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Pediatrics, Harvard
Medical School, Wang 731, 55 Fruit St, Boston, MA 02114. E-mail:
rkleinman@partners.org.
Am J Clin Nutr 2007;85(suppl):635S 8S. Printed in USA. 2007 American Society for Nutrition
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ABSTRACT
Before 2001, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended
that infants be exclusively breastfed for 4 6 mo with the introduction of complementary foods (any fluid or food other than breast
milk) thereafter. In 2001, after a systematic review and expert consultation, this advice was changed, and exclusive breastfeeding is
now recommended for the first 6 mo of life. The systematic review
commissioned by the WHO compared infant and maternal outcomes
for exclusive breastfeeding for 3 4 mo versus 6 mo. That review
concluded that infants exclusively breastfed for 6 mo experienced
less morbidity from gastrointestinal infection and showed no deficits
in growth but that large randomized trials are required to rule out
small adverse effects on growth and the development of iron deficiency in susceptible infants. Others have raised concerns that the
evidence is insufficient to confidently recommend exclusive breastfeeding for 6 mo for infants in developed countries, that breast milk
may not meet the full energy requirements of the average infant at 6
mo of age, and that estimates of the proportion of exclusively breastfed infants at risk of specific nutritional deficiencies are not available. Additionally, virtually no data are available to form evidencebased recommendations for the introduction of solids in formula-fed
infants. Given increasing evidence that early nutrition and growth
have effects on both short- and longer-term health, it is vital that this
issue be investigated in high-quality randomized studies. Meanwhile, the consequences of the WHO recommendation should be monitored in different settings to assess compliance and record and act on
adverse events. The policy should then be reviewed in the context of
new data to formulate evidence-based recommendations.
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THE SCIENCE
Following the 2001 Expert Consultation and the 2002 publication of a WHO-commissioned systematic review (5), the global
recommendation was modified and exclusive breastfeeding is
now recommended for the first 6 mo of life with the introduction
of CF thereafter and continued breastfeeding for the first 2 y (6).
This topic has become one of the most debated areas of infant
nutrition in the past few years. The optimal duration of exclusive
breastfeeding is often equated with the optimal age for introduction of solid foods. However, because CFs are defined by the
WHO as any fluid or food other than breast milk, breast milk
substitutes are regarded as CFs, and formula-fed infants are
deemed to have received CF from the point at which they receive
formula. Current WHO recommendations focusing on the introduction of CF in the context of the optimal duration of exclusive
breastfeeding are therefore difficult to apply to formula-fed infants, yet this group constitutes a significant proportion of
healthy term infants in many industrialized countries. The debate
has become highly politicized.
In this review, we first discuss the available scientific evidence
relevant to the question of whether exclusive breastfeeding for
6 mo results in benefits to mother and infant compared with
exclusive breastfeeding for between 4 and 6 mo. We will also
discuss available data relating to the situation in formula-fed
infants. We will then put this in the context of the politics of infant
feeding and the development of public health policy.
that the authors received financial support from industry, although the work was in fact carried out independently.
Since the WHO systematic review, few data have been published that add significantly to the scientific basis for the global
recommendation. Burdette et al (11) investigated growth and
body composition in 5-y-old children by using dual-energy
X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) and found no effect of the duration
or exclusivity of breastfeeding on fat or lean mass. Chantry et al
(12) compared exclusive breastfeeding for 6 mo with 4 to 6
mo in a secondary analysis of data from children aged 6 to 24
mo from the third National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey. Infants fully breastfed for 4 to 6 mo (n 223) were at
greater risk of pneumonia than were those who were fully breastfed for 6 mo (n 136; 6.5% compared with 1.6%). After
adjustment for demographic variables, childcare, and smoke exposure, children breastfed for 4 to 6 mo had a significantly
higher risk of pneumonia (OR: 4.27; 95% CI: 1.27, 14.35) and
3 episodes of otitis media (OR: 1.95; 95% CI: 1.06, 3.59) than
did children fully breastfed for 6 mo.
Public health policy should ideally be based on scientific evidence. In the case of infant nutrition, this has historically centered on meeting energy and nutrient requirements and on shortterm health outcomes, but recent developments have highlighted
the need to consider effects on longer-term health. Based on
available scientific data, a policy of exclusive breastfeeding for
6 mo appears eminently sensible for countries in which clean
water and safe, nutritious first solid foods are scarce. Scientific
evidence supporting the same policy for the developed world is
less persuasive. However, the WHO recommendation is intentionally a global one, on the basis that what is best for an infant
in terms of the duration of breastfeeding should not depend on his
or her environment, and concerns that having a different recommendation for the developed world might be seen as undermining
breastfeeding. It should be noted, however, that the WHO and
other agencies have supported alternatives to breastfeeding in
situations such as maternal HIV infection and other scenarios
when breastfeeding is not safe or feasible.
This topic was recently reviewed by Foote and Marriott (20),
who concluded that the evidence that introducing solids before 6
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