Breast milk for adults could be available as a supplement

Breast milk is recognised for having antibodies that help boost a baby’s immune system and reduce the risk of many diseases.

Now adults could soon benefit from its protective effects through a new prebiotic supplement.

One Silicon Valley biotech start-up has plans to isolate the sugars that make breast milk so health-giving and turn them into a product marketed at infants and grown-ups alike.

It comes after scientists discovered last year that it was possible to create the first formula milk with human bacteria. 

The firm behind the idea, Sugarlogix, based in Berkeley, California, believes it could create an immune-boosting superfood supplement that may be the next big health craze.

It’s hoped the sugars in a mother’s milk – now known to feed ‘good’ bacteria in infants’ intestines – could be used to treat a host of conditions in adults which are increasingly linked to gut health, such as diabetes and irritable bowel syndrome.

The supplement could also potentially be used by mothers who struggle to breastfeed.

However, while there is unequivocal evidence on the benefits of breast milk for babies, the jury is largely out on whether it would offer the same for grown-ups.

A new prebiotic supplement containing breast milk sugars could be the next big health craze, according to Sugarlogix (stock photo)

Germ-fighting ‘good bacteria

Breastfeeding has long-term benefits for a baby, lasting right into adulthood, say NHS Choices. 

A mother’s milk has been linked to lower chances of an infant getting tummy bugs and eczema, as well as developing type 2 diabetes, obesity and cardiovascular disease in adulthood.

Scientists have discovered that its secret lies in complex sugars called human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs).

Previously thought to have no purpose because babies do not actually digest them, they have been found to encourage the growth of a beneficial bacteria called Bifidobacterium longum infantis in their guts.

These keep ‘bad’ bacteria at bay and indeed have been found to be vital in combating infections like E.coli. 

But not every woman can easily produce breast milk. Just a quarter of new mothers never attempt it and many find it too painful or difficult.

So naturally, these findings have caused a rush of companies hoping to synthesize and market the unique ingredients in breast milk. 

MICROBIOME: DOES IT CONTROL EVERYTHING? 

Researchers now estimate that a typical human body is made up of about 30 trillion human cells and 39 trillion bacteria.

These are key in harvesting energy from our food, regulating our immune function, and keeping the lining of our gut healthy.

Interest in, and knowledge about, the microbiota has recently exploded as we now recognise just how essential they are to our health.

A healthy, balanced microbiome helps us break down foods, protects us from infection, trains our immune system and manufactures vitamins, such as K and B12.

It also sends signals to our brain that can affect mood, anxiety and appetite.

Imbalances in the gut are increasingly being linked to a range of conditions. Last year, scientists at California Institute of Technology found the first ever link between the gut and Parkinson’s symptoms.

The composition of our gut microbiota is partly determined by our genes but can also be influenced by lifestyle factors such as our diet, alcohol intake and exercise, as well as medications

Could it treat a host of diseases? 

Tech website Gizmodo interviewed Kulika Chomvong, CEO of Sugarlogix.

‘We were interested in prebiotics and we realized that the best type of prebiotics exist in nature, and that’s in human breast milk,’ he said.

Probiotics are ‘good’ bacteria that help keep your digestive system healthy by controlling growth of harmful bacteria.

Prebiotics, which are ‘non‐living’ and resist digestion, ‘feed’ the good bacteria in our gut helping them to grow and flourish.  

Increasingly, research is emerging showing how poor gut health is linked to conditions ranging from irritable bowel syndrome, diabetes, high blood pressure, depression, obesity, childhood asthma, to colitis and colon cancer. 

B. infantis, the bacteria that HMOs promotes in infants, has been found to be low in quantity in patients with type II diabetes and irritable bowel syndrome.

So businesses have their eye on a grander market beyond babies: breast milk for grownups. 

Chomvong revealed that Sugarlogix plans to turn its powder-form sugars into a pill, that could be taken daily like you do with a multi-vitamin.

‘This is the very first time adults can really harness the power of breast milk,’ Chomvong said. 

‘We wanted to find the very first food for the gut that we ever received as babies, and that’s breast milk.’

Would it help adults?

HMOs appear to kick start a healthy gut in babies who are born with pristine gut microbiome, but would it work in the same way in adults, who already have thriving bacterial colonies?

Gizmodo sought the opinion of Michael Miller, a microbiologist at the University of Illinois who has studied human breast milk

He argued the benefit of synthesizing sugars for infants is still not even clear, let alone for adults.

‘Different mom’s milks will have different compositions. It’s too complex to fully replicate,’ he told Gizmodo. 

He said that while simple sugars found in breast milk can now make somewhat economically, researchers do not yet understand if the real benefit comes from the full complexity of ingredients it contains.  

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