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Avoiding routine gastric residual volume measurement in neonatal critical care (the neoGASTRIC trial): study protocol for a multi-centre, unblinded, randomised, controlled trial

Avoiding routine gastric residual volume measurement in neonatal critical care (the neoGASTRIC trial): study protocol for a multi-centre, unblinded, randomised, controlled trial
Avoiding routine gastric residual volume measurement in neonatal critical care (the neoGASTRIC trial): study protocol for a multi-centre, unblinded, randomised, controlled trial
Background: routine measurement of gastric residual volumes involves regularly aspirating the entire stomach contents to assess the volume and colour of the aspirate to inform feeding. This is an established practice in many United Kingdom and Australian neonatal units for preterm infants receiving gastric tube feeds. The rationale is to assess feed tolerance and to predict and potentially prevent necrotising enterocolitis, a serious gut condition. Routine measurement of gastric residual volumes may also be associated with adverse outcomes and harm, including delayed achievement of full enteral feeds and longer neonatal unit stay. Evidence to support the routine measurement of gastric residuals is poor, and previous small trials have not been generalisable to UK or Australian neonatal care.

Methods: the aim of the neoGASTRIC trial is to test whether avoiding routine measurement of gastric residual volumes in preterm infants reduces the time taken for an infant to reach full enteral feeds without increasing necrotising enterocolitis. neoGASTRIC is an individually randomised controlled trial in neonatal units in the UK and Australia. A target of 7040 infants born before 34 weeks’ gestation will be randomly allocated, prior to receiving 24 h of enteral feeds > 15 ml/kg/day, on a 1:1 basis to have no routine gastric residual volumes measured, or to have gastric residual volumes measured routinely. Opt-out consent will be used with parent and staff views explored as part of an embedded process evaluation. The primary superiority outcome is time to reach full milk feeds ≥ 145 ml/kg/day for three consecutive days. Bell’s stage 2 or 3 necrotising enterocolitis following blinded adjudication will be the key secondary, non-inferiority safety outcome. Other neonatal core outcomes and health care resource use and costs prior to discharge will be evaluated.

Discussion: neoGASTRIC will address a research priority that affects more than 20,000 preterm infants in the United Kingdom and Australia annually. Even modest improvements in clinical outcomes and resource use could result in large clinical benefits and savings at a population level.

Trial registration: ISRCTN 16710849. Prospectively registered on 8 February 2023.
Enteral feeding, Feeding intolerance, Gastric residual volume, Gastric tube feeds, Infant, Necrotising enterocolitis (NEC), Neonatal care, Neonatal nutrition, Preterm, Protocol, Randomised controlled trial
1745-6215
Nuthall, Elizabeth
a220602f-6f3b-4364-b3e5-713e02fb8edb
Rodriquez, Amy
d2d67d40-1fff-4018-81b5-e09db782a566
Andrzejewksa, Iza
087091bc-9dba-4aca-b8aa-81e5eb3b97d8
Hall, Nigel J.
6919e8af-3890-42c1-98a7-c110791957cf
et al
the neoGASTRIC collaborative group
Nuthall, Elizabeth
a220602f-6f3b-4364-b3e5-713e02fb8edb
Rodriquez, Amy
d2d67d40-1fff-4018-81b5-e09db782a566
Andrzejewksa, Iza
087091bc-9dba-4aca-b8aa-81e5eb3b97d8
Hall, Nigel J.
6919e8af-3890-42c1-98a7-c110791957cf

Nuthall, Elizabeth, Rodriquez, Amy and Andrzejewksa, Iza , et al and the neoGASTRIC collaborative group (2026) Avoiding routine gastric residual volume measurement in neonatal critical care (the neoGASTRIC trial): study protocol for a multi-centre, unblinded, randomised, controlled trial. Trials, 27 (1), [106]. (doi:10.1186/s13063-025-09403-7).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: routine measurement of gastric residual volumes involves regularly aspirating the entire stomach contents to assess the volume and colour of the aspirate to inform feeding. This is an established practice in many United Kingdom and Australian neonatal units for preterm infants receiving gastric tube feeds. The rationale is to assess feed tolerance and to predict and potentially prevent necrotising enterocolitis, a serious gut condition. Routine measurement of gastric residual volumes may also be associated with adverse outcomes and harm, including delayed achievement of full enteral feeds and longer neonatal unit stay. Evidence to support the routine measurement of gastric residuals is poor, and previous small trials have not been generalisable to UK or Australian neonatal care.

Methods: the aim of the neoGASTRIC trial is to test whether avoiding routine measurement of gastric residual volumes in preterm infants reduces the time taken for an infant to reach full enteral feeds without increasing necrotising enterocolitis. neoGASTRIC is an individually randomised controlled trial in neonatal units in the UK and Australia. A target of 7040 infants born before 34 weeks’ gestation will be randomly allocated, prior to receiving 24 h of enteral feeds > 15 ml/kg/day, on a 1:1 basis to have no routine gastric residual volumes measured, or to have gastric residual volumes measured routinely. Opt-out consent will be used with parent and staff views explored as part of an embedded process evaluation. The primary superiority outcome is time to reach full milk feeds ≥ 145 ml/kg/day for three consecutive days. Bell’s stage 2 or 3 necrotising enterocolitis following blinded adjudication will be the key secondary, non-inferiority safety outcome. Other neonatal core outcomes and health care resource use and costs prior to discharge will be evaluated.

Discussion: neoGASTRIC will address a research priority that affects more than 20,000 preterm infants in the United Kingdom and Australia annually. Even modest improvements in clinical outcomes and resource use could result in large clinical benefits and savings at a population level.

Trial registration: ISRCTN 16710849. Prospectively registered on 8 February 2023.

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neoGASTRIC trial protocol paper V1.0 17Oct2025 - Accepted Manuscript
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s13063-025-09403-7 - Version of Record
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 18 December 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 January 2026
Published date: 5 February 2026
Keywords: Enteral feeding, Feeding intolerance, Gastric residual volume, Gastric tube feeds, Infant, Necrotising enterocolitis (NEC), Neonatal care, Neonatal nutrition, Preterm, Protocol, Randomised controlled trial

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 510785
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510785
ISSN: 1745-6215
PURE UUID: efb271b1-2ea8-4c80-9a88-dc01814ce7c0
ORCID for Nigel J. Hall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8570-9374

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 21 Apr 2026 17:00
Last modified: 22 Apr 2026 01:44

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Contributors

Author: Elizabeth Nuthall
Author: Amy Rodriquez
Author: Iza Andrzejewksa
Author: Nigel J. Hall ORCID iD
Corporate Author: et al
Corporate Author: the neoGASTRIC collaborative group

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