Trials / Not Yet Recruiting
Not Yet RecruitingNCT07533578
Chrononutrition in Preterm Infants: a Randomised Controlled Trial of Time-matched Breast Milk Feeding and Its Effects on Sleep and Circadian Development
- Status
- Not Yet Recruiting
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 200 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- Luzerner Kantonsspital · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 0 Days – 1 Month
- Healthy volunteers
- Accepted
Summary
This study investigates whether the timing of feeding expressed breast milk influences infant sleep and circadian (day-night) development in preterm infants. In early life, infants produce very little of the hormone melatonin, which plays a key role in regulating sleep and circadian rhythms. Breast milk naturally contains melatonin, and its levels vary across the day, with higher concentrations at night. This variation may provide important biological signals that help infants develop healthy sleep-wake patterns. However, expressed breast milk is often fed without considering the time it was expressed. This may disrupt the transfer of circadian signals from mother to infant. The aim of this randomised controlled trial is to determine whether feeding expressed breast milk according to the time of expression (e.g. giving night-time milk at night) improves sleep consolidation and circadian development compared with usual feeding practices. A total of 200 preterm infants born between 32+0 and 36+6 weeks' gestation who are receiving expressed breast milk will be enrolled and randomly assigned to one of two groups: Intervention group: preterm infants receive expressed breast milk matched to the time of day it was expressed (day, evening or night) Control group: preterm infants receive expressed breast milk without regard to timing (usual practice) The main outcome is sleep consolidation at 6 months of age, measured objectively using actigraphy (a small wearable device that records sleep and activity). Additional outcomes include sleep patterns over time, circadian development, melatonin exposure, gut microbiota composition, and clinical outcomes such as infections and neurodevelopment. The intervention does not involve any medication and uses the infant's usual nutrition. Risks are minimal and mainly relate to the additional effort required for milk labelling and timing. This study will provide evidence on whether a simple, low-risk change in feeding practice can support infant sleep and early-life circadian development, with potential benefits for child health and family well-being.
Detailed description
This study investigates whether the timing of feeding expressed breast milk influences infant sleep and circadian (day-night) development in preterm infants. In early life, infants produce very little of the hormone melatonin, which plays a key role in regulating sleep and circadian rhythms. Breast milk naturally contains melatonin, and its levels vary across the day, with higher concentrations at night. This variation may provide important biological signals that help infants develop healthy sleep-wake patterns. However, expressed breast milk is often fed without considering the time it was expressed. This may disrupt the transfer of circadian signals from mother to infant. The aim of this randomised controlled trial is to determine whether feeding expressed breast milk according to the time of expression (e.g. giving night-time milk at night) improves sleep consolidation and circadian development compared with usual feeding practices. A total of 200 preterm infants born between 32+0 and 36+6 weeks' gestation who are receiving expressed breast milk will be enrolled and randomly assigned to one of two groups: Intervention group: preterm infants receive expressed breast milk matched to the time of day it was expressed (day, evening or night) Control group: preterm infants receive expressed breast milk without regard to timing (usual practice) The main outcome is sleep consolidation at 6 months of age, measured objectively using actigraphy (a small wearable device that records sleep and activity). Additional outcomes include sleep patterns over time, circadian development, melatonin exposure, gut microbiota composition, and clinical outcomes such as infections and neurodevelopment. The intervention does not involve any medication and uses the infant's usual nutrition. Risks are minimal and mainly relate to the additional effort required for milk labelling and timing. This study will provide evidence on whether a simple, low-risk change in feeding practice can support infant sleep and early-life circadian development, with potential benefits for child health and family well-being.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| OTHER | Chronobiologically Timed Feeding of Expressed Breast Milk | Expressed breast milk is labelled at the time of expression and categorised into predefined time windows: Day milk: 06:00-17:59 Evening milk: 18:00-21:59 Night milk: 22:00-05:59 Infants are fed milk corresponding to the appropriate time-of-day window to align feeding with circadian rhythms. Caregivers receive standardised training, and adherence is monitored using feeding logs. |
| OTHER | Usual Feeding Practice (Untimed Expressed Breast Milk) | Expressed breast milk is fed without consideration of the time of expression. Milk handling, storage, and preparation follow standard procedures. No modification of milk composition or additional substances are introduced. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2026-10-01
- Primary completion
- 2030-09-30
- Completion
- 2031-12-30
- First posted
- 2026-04-16
- Last updated
- 2026-04-16
Locations
1 site across 1 country: Switzerland
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07533578. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.