Fuente:
"milk OR dairy products"
Semin Perinatol. 2026 Jun 19:152276. doi: 10.1016/j.semperi.2026.152276. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTNeonatal nutrition research is pivotal for optimizing long-term health outcomes in high-risk infants, particularly preterm and critically ill neonates, where the foundational "first 1000 days" concept increasingly links early nutritional interventions to lifelong neurodevelopmental, metabolic, and socio-economic trajectories. Despite substantial advances, translating this evolving pre-clinical knowledge base into consistent clinical improvements remains slow. This review synthesizes persistent barriers hindering progress in the field, including inconsistent definitions and reporting standards for nutritional intake and growth metrics, inadequate electronic health record infrastructure for automated nutrient calculations across parenteral and enteral sources, restrictive regulatory and consent frameworks that limit equitable enrollment in high-risk populations, and mounting institutional pressures that erode the physician-scientist pipeline. Natural variability in human milk further complicates precise nutritional delivery, where nutrient delivery scales predictably with caloric density, yet routine direct measurement remains underutilized. To accelerate meaningful advancements, the field requires standardized reporting guidelines, enhanced decision-support tools, innovative trial designs, and strengthened career support for physician-scientists. Addressing these interconnected barriers through collaboration, technological integration, and multi-level policy reform holds the potential to shift neonatal nutrition science from incremental gains to rapid improvements in infant survival, growth, and lifelong health.PMID:42321112 | DOI:10.1016/j.semperi.2026.152276