Objective
Early hypoglycaemia at the time of neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) admission is common in very/extreme preterm infants. This study aimed to determine whether buccal dextrose gel in the delivery room (DR) would improve rates of early hypoglycaemia in this population.
Design
Randomised, blinded, placebo-controlled trial.
Setting
Four level-3 and one level-2 neonatal units.
Patients
Inborn infants≤32+0 weeks gestational age (GA).
Interventions
Infants were randomised to 40% dextrose or placebo gel in the DR (≤29+0 GA: 0.5 mL gel, ≥29+1 GA: 1 mL gel).
Main outcome measure
Hypoglycaemia (<1.8 mmol/L) measured at the time of first intravenous access at NICU admission.
Results
Between November 2020 and August 2022, the recruitment rate was slow (impacted by the requirement for antenatal consent). This fact, coupled with finite research resources, led to a decision to end recruitment early. Data analysis of 169 newborns (33% of target sample size) showed no significant difference in the frequency of the primary outcome between dextrose 24/84 (29%) and placebo 25/85 (29%) groups (OR 0.95; 95% CI 0.49 to 1.86; p=0.88). A post-hoc analysis indicated that the trial had a low (47% conditional power) chance of detecting a statistically significant benefit from the intervention (had the target sample been achieved).
Conclusions
This study showed no evidence of benefit of 40% dextrose gel on rates of hypoglycaemia at NICU admission. Management of these vulnerable newborns should continue to focus on vascular access and commencement of dextrose-containing intravenous fluids as early as possible.
Trial registration number
NCT04353713.
Overview publication
| Title | Delivery room dextrose gel for preterm hypoglycaemia (the GEHPPI study): a randomised placebo-controlled trial |
| Date | March 31st, 2026 |
| Issue name | Archives of Disease in Childhood - Fetal and Neonatal Edition |
| Issue number | v110.3 p319-325 |
| DOI | 10.1136/archdischild-2024-327313 |
| Authors | |
| MTGs | MTG3 |
| Read | Read publication |
