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Very Low Birth Weight Preemies are in hospital 9 days longer if Vitamin D was delayed - Dec 2025


Oral vitamin D supplementation is associated with full enteral feeding in very low birth weight infants

J Matern Fetal Neonatal Med . 2025 Dec;38(1):2515426. doi: 10.1080/14767058.2025.2515426
Yie Huang 1, Ping Zhou 2, Ruiping Wu 3, Xiaomei Fan 4, Ping Zheng 5, Xintian Shen 4

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9 fewer days in hospital if Vitamin D started soon

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Background and aims: As vitamin D is mostly transferred to the fetus during the third trimester, preterm infants are born with lower vitamin D stores. However, most clinical guidelines do not suggest clearly when to initiate vitamin D in very low birth weight (VLBW) infants. This retrospective study aimed to assess whether the initiation of oral vitamin D supplementation was associated with full enteral feeding (FEF) in VLBW infants.

Methods: A total of 383 VLBW infants (gestational age, 24-32 weeks; birth weight, 570-1500 g) admitted to our neonatal intensive care unit between October 2018 and December 2022 were included in this study. To assess the independent association between oral vitamin D and FEF, univariate or multivariate Cox analyses were performed, adjusting for 16 major confounders (birth weight, initiation of enteral feeding, sepsis, the enteral feed volume when oral vitamin D started, etc.). Time-varying coefficients method is used to accommodate the non-constant hazard ratio implied by the proportional hazards assumption violation.

Results: Multivariate Cox regression for the time to reach full enteral feeding (T-FEF) and time to add human milk fortifier (T-HMF) were analyzed respectively. Delayed oral vitamin D supplementation (after postnatal day 13) was independently and negatively associated with the cumulative probability of achieving FEF (B - 5.088, RR 0.006 (0.001-0.057), p < .00001). Delayed oral vitamin D supplementation was independently and negatively associated with the cumulative probability of adding human milk fortifier (HMF) (B - 3.115, RR 0.044 (0.006-0.334), p = .002). The hazard effect of the delayed supplementation diminished over time, with the RR = EXP(-5.088 + 1.447 × Ln(T-FEF)) or RR = EXP(-3.115 + 0.729 × Ln(T-HMF)), respectively.

Conclusions: Our research suggests that earlier initiation of oral vitamin D is associated with improved FEF in VLBW infants.
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Attached files

ID Name Comment Uploaded Size Downloads
22738 hpspital stay.webp admin 13 Jun, 2025 43.15 Kb 76
22737 Days.webp admin 13 Jun, 2025 16.78 Kb 66
22736 time to reach full enteral feeding.webp admin 13 Jun, 2025 53.02 Kb 88
22735 VLBW Feeding_CompressPdf.pdf admin 13 Jun, 2025 402.08 Kb 52