| Literature DB >> 28841893 |
Danielle E Bear1,2,3,4,5, Liesl Wandrag6,7, Judith L Merriweather8, Bronwen Connolly9,10,11,12, Nicholas Hart13,9,10, Michael P W Grocott14,15,16.
Abstract
The lack of benefit from randomised controlled trials has resulted in significant controversy regarding the role of nutrition during critical illness in terms of long-term recovery and outcome. Although methodological caveats with a failure to adequately appreciate biological mechanisms may explain these disappointing results, it must be acknowledged that nutritional support during early critical illness, when considered alone, may have limited long-term functional impact.This narrative review focuses specifically on recent clinical trials and evaluates the impact of nutrition during critical illness on long-term physical and functional recovery.Specific focus on the trial design and methodological limitations has been considered in detail. Limitations include delivery of caloric and protein targets, patient heterogeneity, short duration of intervention, inappropriate clinical outcomes and a disregard for baseline nutritional status and nutritional intake in the post-ICU period.With survivorship at the forefront of critical care research, it is imperative that nutrition studies carefully consider biological mechanisms and trial design because these factors can strongly influence outcomes, in particular long-term physical and functional outcome. Failure to do so may lead to inconclusive clinical trials and consequent rejection of the potentially beneficial effects of nutrition interventions during critical illness.Entities:
Keywords: Critical illness; Energy; Nutrition; Physical recovery; Protein
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28841893 PMCID: PMC6389279 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-017-1810-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Randomised controlled trials of nutrition in critically ill patients reporting physical and functional outcomes
| NHLBI et al., 2012 [ | Needham et al., 2013 [ | Casaer et al., 2013 [ | Hermans et al., 2013a [ | Doig et al., 2013 [ | Harvey et al., 2014 [ | Wei et al., 2015 [ | Doig et al., 2015 [ | Ferrie et al., 2016 [ | |
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| Study design | Multicentre, 44-site RCT | Multicentre, 5-site follow-up from EDEN | Prospective sub-study of large RCT | Sub-study from EPaNIC | Multicentre, 31-site RCT | Multicentre, 33-site pragmatic RCT | Retrospective analysis from REDOXs | Multicentre, 13-site RCT | Single-centre RCT |
| Duration of intervention | 6 days | 6 days | 9 days | 10 days | NR | 5 days (120 hours) | 8 days | 7 days | Up to 10 days |
| Age, years (mean) | Trophic feeding: 52 Full feeding: 52 | Trophic feeding: 48 | Early PN: 44 Late PN: 50 | Early PN: 62 | Standard care: 68.6 Early PN: 68.4 | PN: 63.3 EN: 62.9 | Low nutritional adequacy: 62 Moderate nutritional adequacy: 62 High nutritional adequacy: 65 | Standard: 61 Restricted: 59 | 0.8 g/kg amino acids: 64.5 1.2 g/kg amino acids: 67.0 |
| BMI | Trophic feeding: 29.9 | Trophic feeding: 31 | Early PN: 24 Late PN: 25 | Early PN: 25 Late PN: 24.9 (median) | Standard care: 28.5 Early PN: 27.9 | PN: 27.7 EN: 28.2 | Low nutritional adequacy: 29.7 Moderate nutritional adequacy: 30.4 High nutritional adequacy: 29.3 | Standard: 28 Restricted: 28 | 0.8 g/kg amino acids: |
| APACHE II score | NR | NR | Early PN: 28 Late PN: 30 | Early PN: 32 Late PN: 30 (median) | Standard care: 21.5 Early PN: 20.5 | PN: 15.1 EN: 15.2 | Low nutritional adequacy: 27.2 Moderate nutritional adequacy: 26.8 High nutritional adequacy: 26.6 | Standard: 18 Restricted: 18 | 0.8 g/kg amino acids: 23.7 1.2 g/kg amino acids: 25.5 |
| Mortalityb (%) | Trophic feeding: 23.2 (60 days) | Trophic feeding: 2 Full feeding: 7 (before 6-month follow-up) | Early PN: 20 Late PN: 0 (90 days) | Early PN: 13 Late PN: 10 | Standard care: 14.66 Early PN: 11.89 | PN: 26.6 EN: 29.4 | Low nutritional adequacy: 26 Moderate nutritional adequacy: 27 High nutritional adequacy: 23 | Standard: 9 Restricted: 5 | 0.8 g/kg amino acids: 6 1.2 g/kg amino acids: 8 |
| LOS (ICU)c | NR | Trophic feeding: 15.8 | Early PN: 12 Late PN: 9 | Early PN: 11 Late PN: 13 | Standard care: 9.3 (mean) Early PN: 8.2 (mean) | PN: 8.1 days EN: 7.3 days | Low nutritional adequacy: 18 Moderate nutritional adequacy: 19 High nutritional adequacy: 18 | Standard: 10.0 (mean) Restricted: 11.4 (mean) | 0.8 g/kg amino acids: 6.0 1.2 g/kg amino acids: 5.0 |
| Provision of energy | Trophic feeding: 400 kcal/day Full feeding: 1300 kcal/day | NR | Early PN: approximately 21 kcal/kg Late PN: approximately 14 kcal/kg (over period of CT scans) | Overall total NR Early PN: < 30 kcal/kg/day Late PN: < 25 kcal/kg/day | Overall total not reported, but < 1600 kcal/day | PN: 21 kcal/kg/day EN: 18.5 kcal/kg/day | Mean for each group NR, but overall 56% | Overall total NR Standard: < 1600 kcal/day each day Restricted: < 1400 kcal/day each day | 0.8 g/kg amino acids: 24.9 kcal/kg 1.2 g/kg amino acids: 23.1 kcal/kg (first 7 days only) |
| Provision of protein | NR | NR | NR | Overall total NR Early PN < 1.0 g/kg/day Late PN: < 0.9 g/kg/day | Total not reported, but 60 g/day | PN: 0.7 g/kg/day EN: 0.6 g/kg/day | Mean for each group NR, but overall 51% | Overall total NR Standard: < 60 g/day each day Restricted: < 55 g/day each day | 0.8 g/kg amino acids: 0.9 g/kg 1.2 g/kg amino acids: 1.09 g/kg |
| Outcomes | ↑ number of patients discharged to rehabilitation facilities in trophic feeding group | No difference in physical function at 1 year | Early PN ↓ femoral muscle quality (increased intramuscular water/lipid content) at median of ICU day 9 | ↓ weakness on first assessment (median day 9) Faster recovery of weakness Favouring late PN | Improved SGA scores per week | No difference in HRQoL at 1 year using EQ-5D-5 L | Improved functional aspects of HRQoL at 3 months with improved nutritional adequacy | ↓ general health at day 90 in restricted caloric group using RAND- 36 survey | ↑ handgrip strength at day 7 |
NHLBI National Heart Lung and Blood Institute Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Clinical Trials Network, ALI acute lung injury, NR not reported, LOS length of stay, BMI body mass index, EDEN Early vs. Delayed Enteral Feeding to Treat People with Acute Lung Injury of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome, EPaNIC Early Parenteral Completing Enteral Nutrition in Adult Critically ill Patients, EQ-5D EuroQol 5 Dimension Questionnaire, REDOXs Reducing Deaths Due to Oxidative Stress Study, SGA subjective global assessment, PN parenteral nutrition, EN enteral nutrition, ICU intensive care unit, HRQoL health-related quality of life, RCT randomised controlled trial, APACHE Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation, CT computed tomography, ↑ increase, ↓ decrease
aOnly data for patients assessed with Medical Research Council sum score presented here
bICU mortality unless specified
cMedian unless specified