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ARA or no ARA in infant formulae,that is the question
Authors:P Tounian  M Bellaïche  P Legrand
Institution:1. Pediatric Nutrition and Gastroenterology department, Trousseau Hospital, AP–HP, Sorbonne University, 75012 Paris, France;2. Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition department, Robert Debré Hospital, AP–HP, 75019 Paris, France;3. Biochemistry/Human Nutrition, Agrocampus-Ouest, Rennes, 35042 Rennes, France
Abstract:Recently, the European Commission issued a Delegated Regulation updating the compositional and information requirements for infant and follow-on formulae that are to be applied at the latest in February 2021. This new regulation changes the status of docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) from an optional ingredient to a mandatory nutrient in these formulae at levels between 20 and 50 mg/100 kcal (0.5–1% of fatty acids). By contrast, arachidonic acid (ARA) becomes an optional nutrient. Following publication of the new regulation, global scientific experts have expressed concerns regarding the potential health risks of new infant formulae containing only DHA, especially at levels higher than those in breast milk and infant formulae marketed to date. Both DHA and ARA play a crucial role in infant development. First, breast milk, the gold standard for infant feeding, contains both DHA and ARA. Second, during development, the conversion of linoleic acid into ARA through desaturation steps is not sufficient to meet nutritional needs, especially in carriers of newly identified genetic variants in fatty acid desaturases, which weaken the biosynthetic production of ARA. Third, circulating levels of DHA and ARA in breastfed infants can only be matched with the addition of both fatty acids to formulae. And fourth, most studies performed to date have demonstrated that important physiological and developmental endpoints are sensitive to the ratio of dietary ARA:DHA. The precautionary principle applies when implementing the new EU regulation for infant and follow-on formulae. As a consequence, given the vulnerability of developing infants as well as the absence of conclusive evidence that formulae with at least 20 mg DHA/100 kcal, but no ARA, are safe and suitable to support the growth and development of infants similar to their breastfed peers, it remains necessary to still market formulas containing both ARA and DHA until proved otherwise.
Keywords:Arachidonic acid  Desaturase  Docosahexaenoic acid  Infant formula  Neurologic development
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