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The speed of increasing milk feeds: a randomised controlled trial

The speed of increasing milk feeds: a randomised controlled trial
The speed of increasing milk feeds: a randomised controlled trial
Background: in the UK, 1–2% of infants are born very preterm (<32 weeks of gestation) or have very low birth weight (<1500 g). Very preterm infants are initially unable to be fed nutritional volumes of milk and therefore require intravenous nutrition. Milk feeding strategies influence several long and short term health outcomes including growth, survival, infection (associated with intravenous nutrition) and necrotising enterocolitis (NEC); with both infection and NEC being key predictive factors of long term disability. Currently there is no consistent strategy for feeding preterm infants across the UK. The SIFT trial will test two speeds of increasing milk feeds with the primary aim of determining effects on survival without moderate or severe neurodevelopmental disability at 24 months of age, corrected for prematurity. The trial will also examine many secondary outcomes including infection, NEC, time taken to reach full feeds and growth.

Methods/design: two thousand eight hundred very preterm or very low birth weight infants will be recruited from approximately 30 hospitals across the UK to a randomised controlled trial. Infants with severe congenital anomaly or no realistic chance of survival will be excluded. Infants will be randomly allocated to either a faster (30 ml/kg/day) or slower (18 ml/kg/day) rate of increase in milk feeds. Data will be collected during the neonatal hospital stay on weight, infection rates, episodes of NEC, length of stay and time to reach full milk feeds. Long term health outcomes comprising vision, hearing, motor and cognitive impairment will be assessed at 24 months of age (corrected for prematurity) using a parent report questionnaire.

Discussion: extensive searches have found no active or proposed studies investigating the rate of increasing milk feeds. The results of this trial will have importance for optimising incremental milk feeding for very preterm and/or very low birth weight infants. No additional resources will be required to implement an optimal feeding strategy, and therefore if successful, the trial results could rapidly be adopted across the NHS at low cost.

Trial registration: ISRCTN Registry; ISRCTN76463425 on 5 March, 2013.
1471-2431
Abbott, Jane
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Berrington, Janet
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Bowler, Ursula
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Boyle, Elaine
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Dorling, Jon
e55dcb9a-a798-41a1-8753-9e9ff8aab630
Embleton, Nicholas
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Juszczak, Edmund
9267758e-8ab8-44c7-ab14-48ef82fa6b6e
Leaf, Alison
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Linsell, Louise
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Johnson, Samantha
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McCormick, Kenny
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McGuire, William
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Roberts, Tracy
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Stenson, Ben
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The Sift Investigators Group
Abbott, Jane
601b85fa-9967-48aa-b4e1-1f9a68f46611
Berrington, Janet
7abdd601-9ade-4b12-a5ef-22fac14ae86f
Bowler, Ursula
49570c44-66b8-4121-a220-3de7e6cf1a0d
Boyle, Elaine
0a18aac0-3ba2-4463-a07c-f5957ed4ceb7
Dorling, Jon
e55dcb9a-a798-41a1-8753-9e9ff8aab630
Embleton, Nicholas
5c621f1e-cee5-4efa-ac43-8a195410c11c
Juszczak, Edmund
9267758e-8ab8-44c7-ab14-48ef82fa6b6e
Leaf, Alison
380f75d8-ccbd-4538-a45a-c4912fd86fc3
Linsell, Louise
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Johnson, Samantha
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McCormick, Kenny
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McGuire, William
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Roberts, Tracy
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Stenson, Ben
21656459-9347-4ac8-8429-cb11c27dad37

The Sift Investigators Group (2017) The speed of increasing milk feeds: a randomised controlled trial. BMC Pediatrics, 17 (1), [39]. (doi:10.1186/s12887-017-0794-z).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: in the UK, 1–2% of infants are born very preterm (<32 weeks of gestation) or have very low birth weight (<1500 g). Very preterm infants are initially unable to be fed nutritional volumes of milk and therefore require intravenous nutrition. Milk feeding strategies influence several long and short term health outcomes including growth, survival, infection (associated with intravenous nutrition) and necrotising enterocolitis (NEC); with both infection and NEC being key predictive factors of long term disability. Currently there is no consistent strategy for feeding preterm infants across the UK. The SIFT trial will test two speeds of increasing milk feeds with the primary aim of determining effects on survival without moderate or severe neurodevelopmental disability at 24 months of age, corrected for prematurity. The trial will also examine many secondary outcomes including infection, NEC, time taken to reach full feeds and growth.

Methods/design: two thousand eight hundred very preterm or very low birth weight infants will be recruited from approximately 30 hospitals across the UK to a randomised controlled trial. Infants with severe congenital anomaly or no realistic chance of survival will be excluded. Infants will be randomly allocated to either a faster (30 ml/kg/day) or slower (18 ml/kg/day) rate of increase in milk feeds. Data will be collected during the neonatal hospital stay on weight, infection rates, episodes of NEC, length of stay and time to reach full milk feeds. Long term health outcomes comprising vision, hearing, motor and cognitive impairment will be assessed at 24 months of age (corrected for prematurity) using a parent report questionnaire.

Discussion: extensive searches have found no active or proposed studies investigating the rate of increasing milk feeds. The results of this trial will have importance for optimising incremental milk feeding for very preterm and/or very low birth weight infants. No additional resources will be required to implement an optimal feeding strategy, and therefore if successful, the trial results could rapidly be adopted across the NHS at low cost.

Trial registration: ISRCTN Registry; ISRCTN76463425 on 5 March, 2013.

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Accepted/In Press date: 18 January 2017
Published date: 28 January 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493697
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493697
ISSN: 1471-2431
PURE UUID: d3e829e1-fd07-4761-b421-a9cbef2cf3cb
ORCID for Jon Dorling: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1691-3221

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Date deposited: 11 Sep 2024 16:32
Last modified: 12 Sep 2024 02:10

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Contributors

Author: Jane Abbott
Author: Janet Berrington
Author: Ursula Bowler
Author: Elaine Boyle
Author: Jon Dorling ORCID iD
Author: Nicholas Embleton
Author: Edmund Juszczak
Author: Alison Leaf
Author: Louise Linsell
Author: Samantha Johnson
Author: Kenny McCormick
Author: William McGuire
Author: Tracy Roberts
Author: Ben Stenson
Corporate Author: The Sift Investigators Group

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