# Rapid assessment of feeding intolerance: a systematic approach to reduce time to full enteral feeding in preterm infants

**Authors:** Elena Maggiora, Francesco Cresi, Giulia Maiocco, Chiara Peila, Barbara Vania, Elisa Rossi, Danilo A. W. Gavilanes, Diego Gazzolo, Alessandra Coscia

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fped.2026.1755920 · 2026-03-05

## TL;DR

A new protocol called RAFI helps preterm infants reach full feeding faster, especially those with growth issues.

## Contribution

A structured protocol for assessing feeding intolerance in preterm infants is shown to reduce time to full enteral feeding.

## Key findings

- RAFI infants achieved full enteral feeding significantly earlier than controls.
- Intrauterine growth-restricted infants on RAFI reached full feeding at a younger age and lower weight.
- RAFI showed a trend toward shorter central venous catheter use and hospital stay.

## Abstract

Feeding intolerance (FI) is common in very preterm infants and often leads to unnecessary interruptions in enteral nutrition (EN), delaying full enteral feeding (FEF). The absence of standardized criteria contributes to inconsistent management. We evaluated the impact of a structured protocol—Rapid Assessment of Feeding Intolerance (RAFI)—on FEF achievement in preterm infants.

This single-center, retrospective-prospective superiority cohort study included infants <30 weeks' gestation. Two cohorts were defined: a historical control group (pre-RAFI) and a RAFI group (first implementation phase). The primary outcome was time to FEF (150 mL/kg/day of EN). One-sided statistical tests were used to assess the superiority of RAFI. Stratified analysis was performed for infants with intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR).

Sixty infants were included (30 per group). RAFI infants achieved FEF significantly earlier than controls [median 23.0 (IQR 18.0–30.0) vs. 30.0 (24.0–34.5) days; p = 0.041]. Among IUGR infants (n = 14), RAFI group achieved FEF earlier [27.00 (24.00–32.00) vs. 35.00 (34.00–61.00) days; p = 0.036] at earlier post-menstrual age [33.0 (32.5–34.0) vs. 34.0 (34.0–37.5) weeks; p = 0.028] and with a lower weight [1,280 (1,130–1,382) vs. 1,535 (1,325–2,002) g; p = 0.048]. A trend towards a shorter duration of central venous catheter (p = 0.059) and hospital stay (p = 0.064) was observed.

RAFI implementation was associated with earlier achievement of FEF, particularly in IUGR infants. These findings suggest that a structured and standardized approach to feeding intolerance assessment may facilitate nutritional advancement in very preterm neonates.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** IUGR (MESH:D005317), FI (MESH:D001068)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12999569/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12999569