| Literature DB >> 29895309 |
Arthur R H van Zanten1, Laurent Petit2, Jan De Waele3, Hans Kieft4, Janneke de Wilde5, Peter van Horssen5, Marianne Klebach5, Zandrie Hofman5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Optimal energy and protein provision through enteral nutrition is essential for critically ill patients. However, in clinical practice, the intake achieved is often far below the recommended targets. Because no polymeric formula with sufficient protein content is available, adequate protein intake can be achieved only by supplemental amino acids or semi-elemental formula administration. In the present study, we investigated whether protein intake can be increased with a new, very high intact-protein formula (VHPF) for enteral feeding.Entities:
Keywords: Enteral nutrition; High protein; ICU; Intact protein; Nutritional guidelines
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29895309 PMCID: PMC5998555 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-018-2070-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Subject characteristics at baseline
| SHPF group | VHPF group | |
|---|---|---|
| Sex, male, | 13 (59.1%) | 9 (40.9%) |
| Age, yr, mean (SD) | 60.8 (15.2) | 63.9 (13.3) |
| Body weight, kg, mean (SD) | 91.2 (20.7) | 84.9 (18.3) |
| BMI, kg/m2, mean (SD) | 30.7 (8.4) | 30.3 (4.1) |
| Admission diagnosis, | ||
| Medical | 9 (40.9%) | 8 (36.4%) |
| Surgical | 10 (45.5%) | 11 (50.0%) |
| Surgical nontraumaa | 4 (18.2%) | 4 (18.2%) |
| Surgical trauma | 6 (27.3%) | 7 (31.8%) |
| Trauma | 9 (40.9%) | 10 (45.5%) |
| Trauma nonsurgical | 3 (13.6%) | 3 (13.6%) |
| SOFA score, median [IQR] | 9 [7–11] | 10 [9–11] |
| APACHE II score, median [IQR] | 24 [18–27] | 25 [21–28] |
| Predicted mortality, %, mean (SD) | 48.4 (18.7) | 52. 6 (17.7) |
| Adjusted predicted mortality, %, mean (SD) | 38.7 (19.8) | 42.7 (20.3) |
Abbreviations: BMI Body mass index, SOFA Sequential Organ Failure Assessment, APACHE II Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II, SHPF Standard high protein formula, VHPF Very high protein formula
aSurgical trauma patients were included in both the surgical and trauma subgroups of patients
Fig. 1Daily protein and energy intake during the first 10 days of the intervention period. The figure shows daily protein intake (g/kg ideal body weight [IBW]/d) from study product (a) and daily energy intake (kcal/kg IBW/d) from study product (b) for the standard high-protein formula (SHPF) and very high protein formula (VHPF) groups. SHPF, n = 22; VHPF, n = 22. Box plot interpretation: 0 or + average value, −: median, rectangle bottom: quartile 1 cut point (25th percentile), rectangle upper: quartile 3 cut point (75th percentile). 0 or +: outliers more than 1.5 times IQR above quartile 3 or below quartile 1, T: highest or lowest level not being an outlier. * Statistically significant between-group differences derived from a repeated measures mixed model with intervention group, day, and interaction of intervention by day including the stratification factor center as fixed effects and considering day as a within-subject factor with a compound symmetry variance-covariance structure
Fig. 2Percentage of patients reaching threshold protein intake. Percentage was calculated on the basis of number of subjects in the study on day 5 (standard high-protein formula [SHPF], n = 22; very high protein formula [VHPF], n = 21). * Statistically significant between-group differences derived by chi-square test (for ≥ 0.8, ≥ 1.0, and ≥ 1.2 g/kg ideal body weight [IBW]/d threshold protein intake) or Fisher’s exact test (for ≥ 1.5, ≥ 1.8, and ≥ 2.0 g/kg IBW/d threshold protein intake)
Fig. 3Protein intake as a percentage of target. Protein intake as percent of target for the first 10 days of the intervention period, days 1–3 and days 4–10. Standard high-protein formula (SHPF; n = 22) and very high protein formula (VHPF; n = 22) protein intake as a percentage of target is presented as median protein intake as a percentage of target (1.5 g/kg ideal body weight/d). * Statistically significant between-group difference derived by van Elteren test, stratified for center
Gastrointestinal and clinical outcomes
| SHPF group | VHPF group | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Incidence of gastrointestinal tolerance parametersa | ||||
| Diarrhea | 11 (50.0%) | 8 (36.4%) | 0.361b | |
| Constipation | 16 (72.7%) | 13 (59.1%) | 0.340b | |
| High gastric residual volume (> 500 ml) | 5 (22.7%) | 4 (18.2%) | 0.567c | |
| Vomiting | 6 (27.3%) | 5 (22.7%) | 1.000d | |
| Clinical outcome parameters | ||||
| Mortality rate | ||||
| Total 28 days | 3 (13.6%) | 2 (9.1%) | 0.560e | |
| Total 42 days | 3 (13.6%) | 3 (13.6%) | 0.886e | |
| Hospital | 3 (13.6%) | 2 (9.1%) | 0.638c | |
| ICU | 2 (9.1%) | 1 (4.5%) | 0.637c | |
| Duration of ICU stay (day) | mean (SD) | 18.3 (12.7) | 18.4 (13.4) | 0.913f |
| 95% CI | 12.7–23.9 | 12.4–24.3 | ||
| Duration of hospital stay (day) | Mean (SD) | 28.2 (13.2) | 28.5 (13.3) | 0.955f |
| 95% CI | 22.4–34.1 | 22.5–34.4 | ||
| Duration of first ventilation period (day) | Mean (SD) | 7.4 (5.4) | 10.0 (8.7) | 0.234f |
| 95% CI | 5.0–9.8 | 6.1–13.9 | ||
| SOFA scores | ||||
| Screening | median [IQR] | 9 [7–11] | 10 [9–11] | 0.514g |
| Day 5 | Median [IQR] | 6 [4–8] | 6 [3–8] | 0.647g |
| Day 10 | Median [IQR] | 5 [4–9] | 4 [1–7] | 0.432g |
| End of study | Median [IQR] | 2 [1–3] | 2 [1–3] | 0.608g |
| Day 28 | Median [IQR] | 1 [0–2] | 3 [2–3] | 0.446g |
Abbreviations: SOFA Sequential Organ Failure Assessment, ICU Intensive care unit, SHPF Standard high protein formula, VHPF Very high protein formula
aIncidence is defined as at least one event during the first 10 days of the intervention period
bP value derived by chi-square test
cP value derived by Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel test
dP value derived by Fisher’s exact test
eP value derived by Cox proportional hazards regression analysis with study product and site as stratification factors
fP value derived by two-way analysis of variance with treatment and center as factors. Four subjects were not discharged from the ICU at follow-up. For these subjects, ICU and hospital stays were limited to day of follow-up (day 42 ± 3 days)
gP value derived by van Elteren test (stratified for center)
Fig. 4Total serum amino acid concentrations at baseline and day 5. The total serum amino acid concentration is the sum of leucine, isoleucine, valine, histidine, lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, threonine, tryptophan, alanine, arginine, asparagine, aspartic acid, citrulline, cysteine, glutamic acid, glutamine, glycine, serine, and tyrosine. Box plot interpretation: 0 or +: average value, −: median, rectangle bottom: quartile 1 cut point (25th percentile), rectangle upper: quartile 3 cut point (75th percentile). 0 or +: outliers more than 1.5 times IQR above quartile 3 or below quartile 1, T: highest or lowest level not being an outlier. * Statistically significant between-group difference derived by two-way analysis of variance with treatment, center and baseline as factors. Baseline measurements that were not within 4 hours before the start of study product administration were excluded from statistical analysis (standard high-protein formula [SHPF], n = 20; very high protein formula [VHPF], n = 18)