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A Clinical Study to Investigate the Effects of an Infant Formula Containing Partially Hydrolysed Proteins on Growth, Safety and Tolerance in Healthy Term Infants

A Randomized, Controlled, Double Blind, Parallel Group, Multi-country Study to Investigate the Effects of an Infant Formula Containing Partially Hydrolysed Proteins on Growth, Safety and Tolerance in Healthy Term Infants

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03062761
Acronym
TENUTO
Enrollment
380
Registered
2017-02-23
Start date
2017-04-27
Completion date
2018-11-12
Last updated
2019-01-14

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Growth

Brief summary

It is universally accepted that the best nutrition for a new-born infant is breast milk. Breast milk provides a complete set of nutrients to support growth and development of children in early life, including components that have a beneficial effect on gut health and the body's ability to defend itself against infectious organisms and other invaders (immune system).However, it may occur that a mother is unable to breastfeed her child, or chooses not to breastfeed. In such cases, an infant formula inspired by breast milk is the best alternative. Research is done to optimize milk formula for infants. One of these formulas contains 'partially hydrolyzed' proteins instead of intact proteins, meaning the proteins in this formula are broken down into smaller pieces. These smaller pieces of protein make the milk more suitable for consumption by infants at risk of developing cow's milk allergy. These types of partially hydrolyzed protein formulas have been on the market for several years, in particular for children with a family risk of allergy. So far, no safety related issues have been reported. It is also known that weight gain of infants receiving partially hydrolyzed proteins in general is appropriate according to the World Health Organisation growth standards. The main purpose of the TENUTO study is to demonstrate that infants who receive a specific partially hydrolyzed protein infant formula for the first 4 months of life have a similar weight gain compared to infants receiving standard infant formula with intact proteins. A group of infants who receive breast milk only is also included for comparison.

Interventions

OTHERInfant Formula with prebiotics

Intervention group: Partially hydrolysed whey protein based infant formula containing prebiotics.

Control group: Intact cow's milk protein based infant formula containing prebiotics

Sponsors

Nutricia Research
Lead SponsorINDUSTRY

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
No minimum to 14 Days
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

1. Healthy term infants (gestational age ≥ 37 weeks + 0 days and ≤ 41 weeks + 6 days); 2. Infants' age at enrolment ≤ 14 days; 3. Birth weight within normal range for gestational age and sex (10th to 90th percentile according to the WHO Child Growth Standards - or local growth standards if available); 4. Head circumference at inclusion within normal range for age and sex (within 2 SD curves according to WHO Child Growth Standards - or local growth standards if available); 5. Infant formula arms: infants who are exclusively formula fed by time of randomisation with a maximum infants' age of 14 days (infants of mothers who choose not to breastfeed or mothers who cease breastfeeding for any reason before the infant is 14 days of age); OR Breastfeeding reference arm: infants who are exclusively breastfed and whose mothers are intending to exclusively breastfeed their infant at least until the infant is 17 weeks of age; 6 Written informed consent from parent(s) and/or legal guardian(s) aged ≥ 18 years.

Exclusion criteria

Infants of pregnant women/mothers: 1. who are currently participating or will participate in any other (clinical) study involving investigational or marketed products during pregnancy and/or lactation; 2. known to have a significant medical condition (including during pregnancy) that might interfere with the study or known to affect intra-uterine growth (e.g. placenta previa, pre-eclampsia, eclampsia, gestational diabetes requiring insulin or oral medication), as per investigator's clinical judgement; Infants of parents: 3. who are incapable to comply with study protocol or Investigator's uncertainty about the willingness or ability of the parents to comply with the protocol requirements; Infants: 4. who have to be fed with a special diet other than standard (non-hydrolysed) cow's milk based infant formula 5. known to have current or previous illnesses/conditions which could interfere with the study or its outcome parameters, such as gastrointestinal malformations, congenital metabolic disorders, immune deficiency or major surgery, as per investigator's clinical judgement; 6. with any history of, or current participation in any other study involving investigational or marketed products.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Weight gain17 weeksWeight gain in grams per day from baseline until 17 weeks of age

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Length17 weeksGain in Recumbent length (mm/day)
Head circumference17 weeksGain in Head circumference (mm/day)
Mid-upper arm circumference17 weeksGain in Mid-upper arm circumference (mm/day)
Anthropometric measures17 weeksZ scores of anthropometric parameters
Albumin level17 weeksAlbumin in blood (g/L)
Phosphorus level17 weeksPhosphorus in blood (mmol/l)
Iron level17 weeksIron (µmol/l) in blood
Magnesium level17 weeksMagnesium (mmol/l) in blood
Calcium level17 weeksCalcium in blood (mmol/l)
Number of subjects with adverse events17 weeksAdverse events (by System/Organ Class and Preferred term according the MedDRA ) will be reported as number of subjects with at least one adverse event
Number of adverse events17 weeksNumber of adverse events (by System/Organ Class and Preferred term according the MedDRA)
Concomitant medications17 weeksAll concomitant medications (according to WHO-DDE) will be summarised in individual data listing
Regurgitation4, 8, 13 and 17 weeksRegurgitation nr of occurrences per week
Vomiting4, 8, 13 and 17 weeksVomiting nr of occurrences per week
Diarrhoea4, 8, 13 and 17 weeksNumber of infants with diarrhoea (definition adapted from WHO definition based on number of watery stools per day)
Constipation4, 8, 13 and 17 weeksNumber of infants with constipation (definition adapted from Rome II criteria based on number of defecations and consistency per week)
Nitrogen level17 weeksBlood urea nitrogen (mmol/l)

Countries

Finland, France, Germany, Netherlands, Poland, Spain

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026