Full milk feeds from birth show no difference in hospital stay but lower costs for preterm infants.
This within-trial economic evaluation was a randomized controlled trial conducted in 46 UK NHS neonatal units. The population included 2088 preterm infants born at 30+0 to 32+6 weeks' gestation. The intervention was full milk feeds from birth, and the comparator was gradual feeding with intravenous support. The primary outcome was length of hospital stay, with a follow-up of 1.4 months.
For the primary outcome, length of hospital stay, there was no statistically significant difference between groups. The absolute difference was -0.050 days (95% CI: -0.638 to 0.538). For the secondary outcome of mean total costs, costs were lower in the full milk group by £670 (95% CI: -£1562 to £223; p=0.141). The cost reduction was not statistically significant.
Safety and tolerability were not reported; adverse events, serious adverse events, and discontinuations were not reported. Key limitations include that the cost reduction was not statistically significant (p=0.141) and overall hospital stays were not significantly reduced. The practice relevance suggests early full feeding may offer economic advantages in selected subgroups, but causation is not established, and further research is needed for long-term outcomes.