Why CSIRO, Australian biotech firm All G, are trying to create lab-grown breast milk

Why CSIRO, Australian biotech firm All G, are trying to create lab-grown breast milk


Like with all new health products, there would be numerous hurdles to overcome before the new breast milk substitute is available to consumers, he said.

Nathan Hawkins and Jess Swatosch in the All G lab.

Nathan Hawkins and Jess Swatosch in the All G lab. Credit: Janie Barrett

β€œYou have to prove your product is safe and … that it does have advantages,” Nicholas said. β€œThere are a number of regulatory bodies to pass through and a number of steps. And often an end point is clinical trials.”

Associate Professor Wendy Ingman, who researches breast health at the University of Adelaide, said All G’s new product was an example of positive changes within the industry over recent years.

β€œIt’s a step towards improving infant formula,” Ingman said. β€œIt’s a cleaner way to make the proteins because they’re able to manufacture them to be more like the human proteins in breast milk.”

But Ingman said human breast milk remained a food source that specifically served babies’ nutrition.

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β€œHuman breast milk has got thousands of proteins and different types of carbohydrates and fats in it. It’s a very complex fluid. And while this is improving infant formula, I don’t think it’s going to be on par with the real thing,” she said.

For Pacas, All G isn’t trying to replace human milk or claiming it can directly replicate it – rather, it’s aiming to provide a breast milk substitute that is more nutritionally beneficial than current formulas.

β€œWe’re focused on producing the protein mix,” said Jared Raynes, chief science officer at All G. β€œThat’s only one portion, but an extremely important portion, of the formula.”

Pacas said All G’s new product shared between 70 and 80 per cent of natural breast milk’s composition when combined with essential human fats and carbohydrates.

β€œWe’re not saying we’re identical to breast milk … [but] it’s still totally transformational to what you have out there today because [babies] are drinking basically cow milk, not human,” Pacas said.

Dominique Adamidis with children Charlie, 3, and Sal, 3 months.

Dominique Adamidis with children Charlie, 3, and Sal, 3 months. Credit: Wayne Taylor

β€œBreast milk is absolutely the best. But there are situations when you simply cannot [breastfeed]. You need to go to work, or babies are born prematurely and you don’t have breast milk at all.”

Melbourne mother Dominique Adamidis preferred breastfeeding for both of her children.

β€œI wanted to try and not use formula because there are benefits of breast milk that don’t exist in formula … so breast milk was always going to be my first choice,” she said.

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But Adamidis is glad substitutes are an option for those who are unable to breastfeed. She said improving the nutritional value of formulas would be greatly beneficial for such parents.

β€œObviously, there’s a myriad of reasons that … people won’t be able to breastfeed, and formula is fantastic [in those instances].

β€œI think there should be no shame around formula feeding, and there should be no concern that your baby’s nutritional needs are being met when you’re using formula.”

Nicholas said the industry should prioritise encouraging women to donate breast milk.

β€œWe have to rely on formula and fortifiers that are largely produced from cow milk … and there’s no doubt that it’s not as efficacious as breast milk.

β€œWe’ve got to do a lot of work globally with milk banks to get more donated human milk onto the wards and into hospitals and to babies that actually need it.”

Adamidis donated breast milk when she had an oversupply while her first child was young.

β€œIt’s a great thing if that’s what people want to do … I had excess [milk], my baby stopped taking a bottle, so I had no real use for it myself,” she said. β€œIt didn’t feel like I was going out of my way to do something special.”

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