2020
DOI: 10.1111/jhn.12794
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The use of extensively hydrolysed and amino acid feeds beyond cow’s milk allergy: a national survey

Abstract: Background Extensively hydrolysed formulas (EHFs) and amino acid formulas (AAFs) with proven hypoallergenicity are used for children suffering from cow’s milk allergy, when breast milk is not available. However, these feeds are often used in other medical conditions where tolerance and absorption of whole protein is affected, frequently without assessment of efficacy. This practice survey assessed the use of these feeds in paediatric conditions other than cow’s milk allergy; aiming to describe the population, … Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 40 publications
(51 reference statements)
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“…As expected, the use of hydrolysed formulas, in particular the extensively hydrolysed ones, aligned with the presence of cow’s milk protein allergy and a family history of allergy. Such findings reflect current recommendations and/or common practices regarding the use of hydrolysed formulas (32,53,54) . There is scarce evidence regarding long-term effects (at least over 1 year of age) on child neurodevelopment of the use of infant formula in infancy.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…As expected, the use of hydrolysed formulas, in particular the extensively hydrolysed ones, aligned with the presence of cow’s milk protein allergy and a family history of allergy. Such findings reflect current recommendations and/or common practices regarding the use of hydrolysed formulas (32,53,54) . There is scarce evidence regarding long-term effects (at least over 1 year of age) on child neurodevelopment of the use of infant formula in infancy.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…Of note, indicators for developmental delays in early infancy were not considered. Developmental outcomes may indirectly relate to the choice of infant formula since limited tolerance to standard feeds and regurgitation, which appear more common among children with developmental delays (64,65) , may have prompted the use of hydrolysed formulas in infancy (7,53) . Moreover, due to the small size ( n 1) of the analytical sample consuming elemental formula, it was collapsed with the most similar category in terms of free amino acid content, namely extensively hydrolysed formula ( n 69).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…HAF prescription for at least three months was therefore used as a diagnostic proxy for the CMA cohort, in the absence of a read‐code. Chronic conditions were excluded as described in the methodology, which is expected to have omitted children requiring HAF for chronic conditions outside of allergy 64 and for a 2–4 week diagnostic elimination diets 9 . However, this pragmatic approach meant that all of the CMA cohort had a HAF prescription.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the absence of CMA diagnostic read‐codes, children were included in the CMA cohort if they had a HAF prescription for at least three consecutive months. Whilst the full eligibility criteria was likely to exclude children receiving HAF for conditions other than allergy, 47 or as an elimination diet for diagnostic purposes, 20 this resulted in 100% of the CMA cohort having current or historic HAF prescriptions. This may exceed the rates of HAF prescription typically observed in clinical practice, as breastmilk is recommended as the optimal nutrient source for infants with CMA 1,2,6 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%