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Does Starting Feeds on the First Day of Life Help Premature Infants Reach Full Volume Feeds Sooner?
Sponsor: University of Tennessee
Summary
Feeding advancements in ELBW infants have evolved over decades. The fear of causing mortality and morbidity, notably NEC, have made providers cautious when advancing feeds. ELBW infants initially remained NPO for several days before initiating trophic feeds. However, data then showed that there was no increase in mortality and morbidity if trophic feeds were initiated earlier. Then data showed that a short duration of trophic feeds did not increase mortality and morbidity when compared to a prolonged duration. More recent data showed that enteral feeding should be initiated early, preferably within 24 hours of birth, because it may promote feeding tolerance, shorten the time to reach total enteral feeding, and reduce the incidence of extrauterine growth restriction and late onset sepsis without increasing the risk of developing NEC. The management of enteral nutrition in ELBW infants is still very variable. For example, there is no consensus on the optimal time point after birth at which enteral nutrition can be started. This study evaluates the benefits of starting feeds by 6 hours of life Purpose: The primary aim of this study is to evaluate if in infants ≤ 1000g birth weight, is there a benefit initiating feeds by 6 hours of life (compared to current feeding practice data of 3 days of life) on decreasing the time to attain full feeds in the first 30 days of life. The secondary aim is to evaluate if antenatal feeding discussions would streamline feeding management post-delivery.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
1 Minute - 6 Hours
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
248
Start Date
2024-06-01
Completion Date
2027-06-30
Last Updated
2024-12-12
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Starting feeds within 6 hours of life
Starting feeds within 6 hours of life
Standard feeding protocol
Starting feeds based on standard protocol as per primary team
Locations (1)
Regional One Health
Memphis, Tennessee, United States