The investigators will recruit women living with HIV who recently gave birth (or
caregivers of HIV-exposed infants) living in Saskatoon, SK, Canada, who are being
followed by the Saskatchewan Health Authority (SHA) Pediatric Infectious Diseases.
Women/caregivers may be currently formula feeding or breastfeeding their infant. PDHM
will be provided to participants for a period of ~6-8 weeks (starting at ~2 months
postpartum) and will involve 4 home visits to deliver PDHM in intervals of ~2-3 weeks and
track feeding habits, as described below.
Visit 1 (Baseline; ~2 months postpartum): Deliver frozen PDHM to participant homes. For
those who are formula feeding, we will provide 25 x 120 mL bottles, and for those who are
breastfeeding, we will provide 8 x 120 mL bottles. Those who are formula feeding will be
instructed to provide ~1-2 bottles of PDHM daily as a top-up to infant formula. Those who
are breastfeeding will be instructed to provide PDHM as needed, if a supplement to
breastfeeding is required for any reason (as opposed to supplementing with infant
formula, which is not recommended for those breastfeeding). Caregivers will log the
amount of PDHM given daily, any challenges, and any signs of poor tolerance (e.g.,
fussiness, vomiting, diarrhea). A baseline questionnaire will be given to collect
demographic characteristics about the caregiver and birth data. Infant weight will be
measured using a portable infant scale to establish a baseline for growth tracking.
Visit 2 (2-3 weeks) and Visit 3 (4-6 weeks): Collect all empty bottles from previous
visits and completed tracking documents. Deliver a new batch of PDHM (quantities as
described above).
Visit 4 (6-8 weeks; ~4 months postpartum): Collect all remaining empty bottles and final
tracking documents. Infant weight using a portable infant scale will be measured to
assess growth over the study period.
Participants will also receive a weekly check-in (phone call) to discuss any questions
and gather general updates/information on infant feeding practices.
The investigators will further collect infant health related data collected by SHA Peds
Infectious Disease as part of routine appointments. This will include anthropometric
measurements (e.g., weight, height, head circumference) and occurrences of illness or
opportunistic infections from birth to 4 months.
Statistical Analysis: We will calculate the mean ± SD (or median, IQR) for the frequency
of donor milk provision (# of donor milk feedings/day) and volume (donor milk mL/day)
based tracking documents; empty bottle counts will be used as a secondary estimate.
Events of poor tolerance (e.g., colic, fussiness, vomiting) will be summarized using
absolute frequencies and percentages. Any open-ended comments re: challenges, tolerance,
or general thoughts re: provision of donor milk, will be categorized to identify trends
among study participants. Clinical pilot data will include infant growth (e.g., mean ± SD
daily weight gain velocity, percentiles for length-for-age, weight-for-age, head
circumference, and weight-for-length) and reported rates of illness or infections, based
on Pediatric Infectious Disease records.