Avoiding routine gastric residual volume measurement in neonatal critical care (the neoGASTRIC trial): study protocol for a multi-centre, unblinded, randomised, controlled trial
Elizabeth Nuthall, Amy Rodriquez, Iza Andrzejewksa, Zainab Aslam, Cheryl Battersby, Catherine Beesley, Christina Cole, Helen Campbell, Kim Dalziel, Jon Dorling, Alan Downs, Peter G. Davis, Zoe Daskalopoulou, Amanda Forster, Michaela Graham-Travis, Nigel J. Hall, Marie Hubbard

TL;DR
This study tests if skipping routine stomach volume checks in preterm infants speeds up feeding without increasing gut disease risk.
Contribution
A large multi-center trial evaluating the safety and efficacy of avoiding routine gastric residual volume measurements in preterm infants.
Findings
Avoiding routine gastric residual volume checks may reduce time to reach full enteral feeds.
The trial will assess if this practice increases the risk of necrotising enterocolitis.
Results could influence neonatal care practices in the UK and Australia.
Abstract
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. The aim of the neoGASTRIC trial is to test whether avoiding routine measurement of gastric residual volumes…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfant Nutrition and Health · Infant Development and Preterm Care · Clinical Nutrition and Gastroenterology
