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5 KEY POINTS — EBNEO Commentary on the FEED1 Trial (Singh, 2026)
Early full enteral feeding improved care processes but not discharge timing
Infants receiving full feeds from day 1 achieved enteral feeding faster, required less parenteral nutrition, fewer invasive lines, and less intensive care time — yet overall hospital stay did not shorten.Hospital discharge is influenced by non-medical factors
The unchanged length of stay suggests that discharge timing in moderate-to-late preterm infants is often determined by social, organisational, and administrative factors, rather than physiological readiness alone.The trial challenges how neonatal “success” is defined
FEED1 highlights that meaningful improvements in neonatal care may include:reduced medicalisation
fewer central lines
lower infection exposure
less parenteral nutrition
even if traditional endpoints like length of stay remain unchanged.
Intervention fidelity was a major limitation
Only a minority of infants truly received exclusive enteral feeding from birth, and many deviated from protocol because of perceived feed intolerance, potentially underestimating the true benefits of the intervention.FEED1 supports the safety of early feeding and reframes future research
The study provides reassuring evidence that stable moderate-to-late preterm infants can safely receive full milk feeds from birth, while future work should focus on:standardising feed intolerance criteria
identifying true barriers to discharge
evaluating higher-risk extremely preterm infants
assessing long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes.