This research looked at very preterm infants with very low birth weight who were part of a larger international trial. The study used continuous glucose monitoring and measured their ketone and lactate levels during the first week of life. It included 168 infants, mostly female, and followed them closely after birth.
The main finding was that lactate concentrations were higher at the start and then decreased over the week, while ketone levels remained consistently low. The study did not find a clear link between these metabolite levels and blood glucose, nutrition, or insulin treatment. No safety issues were reported, but the study did not provide detailed safety data.
A key reason to be careful is that this was an observational substudy of a larger trial, so it shows links but not cause and effect. The abstract does not report comparator details, p-values, or confidence intervals, which limits how certain we can be. The findings only apply to the first week of life and may not apply to other infants.
Readers should see this as early, descriptive research that highlights a need for more study on metabolites in preterm infants. It does not change current care, and more evidence is needed before drawing firm conclusions.