| Literature DB >> 29914122 |
Wei Cai1, Phillip C Calder2,3, Maria F Cury-Boaventura4, Elisabeth De Waele5, Julie Jakubowski6, Gary Zaloga7.
Abstract
Intravenous lipid emulsions (ILEs) have been an integral component of parenteral nutrition for more than 50 years. Numerous formulations are available and are based on vegetable (soybean, olive, coconut) and animal (fish) oils. Therefore, each of these formulations has a unique fatty acid composition that offers both benefits and limitations. As clinical experience and our understanding of the effects of fatty acids on various physiological processes has grown, there is evidence to suggest that some ILEs may have benefits compared with others. Current evidence suggests that olive oil-based ILE may preserve immune, hepatobiliary, and endothelial cell function, and may reduce lipid peroxidation and plasma lipid levels. There is good evidence from a large randomized controlled study to support a benefit of olive oil-based ILE over soybean oil-based ILE on reducing infections in critically ill patients. At present there is limited evidence to demonstrate a benefit of olive oil-based ILE over other ILEs on glucose metabolism, and few data exist to demonstrate a benefit on clinical outcomes such as hospital or intensive care unit stay, duration of mechanical ventilation, or mortality. We review the current research and clinical evidence supporting the potential positive biological and clinical aspects of olive oil-based ILE and conclude that olive oil-based ILE is well tolerated and provides effective nutritional support to various PN-requiring patient populations. Olive oil-based ILE appears to support the innate immune system, is associated with fewer infections, induces less lipid peroxidation, and is not associated with increased hepatobiliary or lipid disturbances. These data would suggest that olive oil-based ILE is a valuable option in various PN-requiring patient populations.Entities:
Keywords: hepatobiliary function; immune system; lipid emulsions; lipid peroxidation; olive oil; oxidative stress; parenteral nutrition
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29914122 PMCID: PMC6024782 DOI: 10.3390/nu10060776
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Fatty acid composition of commercially available parenteral nutrition lipid emulsions.
| Constituent | Intralipid | ClinOleic | Lipofundin MCT/LCT | Structolipid | Omegaven | Lipoplus/Lipidem | Smoflipid |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oil Source | 100% Soybean | 80% Olive | 50% MCT | 36% MCT | 100% Fish | 50% MCT | 30% MCT |
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| Medium-chain FA | |||||||
| Caprylic | ND | ND | 27.0 | 14.47 | ND | 24.18–30.1 | 16.0–20.5 |
| Capric | ND | ND | 17.95 | 9.34 | ND | 16.13–19.4 | 9.85–13.0 |
| Long-chain FA | |||||||
| Oleic acid | 20.92 | 59.69 | 11.68 | 16.55 | 10.15 | 7.9–13.44 | 25.2–30.77 |
| α-linolenic | 6.65 | 1.71 | ND | 5.72 | 1.23 | 2.42–3.41 | 2.0–2.75 |
| Eicosapentaenoic | ND | ND | ND | NA | 19.34 | 2.75–3.69 | 2.35–3.03 |
| Docosahexaenoic | 0.11 | 0.06 | 0.06 | 0.19 | 17.67 | 2.3–2.53 | 1.73–2.75 |
| Arachidonic | 0.18 | 0.16 | 0.19 | 0.24 | 1.47 | 0.52–0.66 | 0.27–0.5 |
| Linoleic | 54.68 | 18.56 | 28.89 | 39.18 | 2.98 | 20.88–25.72 | 17.8–21.42 |
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| β-sitosterol | 302.6 | 240.6 | 191.6 | 240.0 | ND | NA | 131.6 |
| Campesterol | 55.4 | 13.3 | 30.9 | 44.0 | 1.0 | NA | 20.5 |
| Stigmasterol | 65.1 | 12.2 | 46.0 | 48.8 | 1.4 | NA | 18.5 |
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| α-tocopherol | 21.0 ± 0.2 | 32.0 ± 0.7 | 132.0 ± 5.6 | 28.4 ± 1.0 | 230.0 ± 0.8 | 177.0 ± 0.7 | 164.5 ± 2.7 |
| β-tocopherol | 3.8 ± 0.7 | 0.6 ± 0.1 | 2.1 ± 0.1 | 1.9 ± 0.0 | ND | 1.5 ± 0.0 | 1.5 ± 0.1 |
| γ-tocopherol | 108.0 ± 0.9 | 14.0 ± 0.0 | 68.0 ± 1.0 | 68.6 ± 0.7 | 0.2 ± 0.0 | 57.0 ± 0.3 | 29.2 ± 0.6 |
| δ-tocopherol | 33.0 ± 0.2 | 11.0 ± 0.0 | 21.0 ± 0.2 | 27.7 ± 0.1 | 0.0 ± 0.0 | 69.0 ± 0.3 | 10.7 ± 0.1 |
Information taken from [5,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19]. FA—fatty acids; MCT—medium-chain triglycerides; MUFA—monounsaturated FA; NA—not available, ND—not detected; PUFA—polyunsaturated FA; SD—standard deviation; SFA—short-chain FA.
Figure 1Flow diagram of the articles identified and included in this review. * Bibliographies of review articles were searched by hand to identify additional relevant articles.
Figure 2Metabolic pathways of n-3 and n-6 fatty acids. Adapted from [30], Copyright 2009, with permission from Elsevier.
Effects of olive oil-based intravenous lipid emulsions on inflammation, immune function, and infections.
| Study | Population | Intervention and Control | Duration | Outcome in Intervention Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Buenestado et al., 2006 [ | In vitro: human neutrophils | OO | In vitro: 1 h to 48 h incubation | OO had lower impact on neutrophils (in vitro) and leukocytes (in vivo) compared with other ILEs |
| Buschmann et al., 2015 [ | In vitro: Murine aortic endothelial cells and bone marrow PMNs | OO | In vitro: 3 h incubation | During systemic inflammation, OO had superior anti-inflammatory properties compared with other ILEs |
| Cury-Boaventura et al., 2008 [ | In vivo: human lymphocytes and neutrophils | OO ( | 6 h IV infusion | Decreased lymphocyte proliferation |
| In vitro: human peripheral white blood cells | OO | 48 h incubation | No effect on lymphocyte proliferation | |
| Juttner et al., 2008 [ | In vitro: human neutrophils and monocytes | OO | Incubations up to 1 h | SO and OO (to lesser extent) induced hydrogen peroxide production in neutrophils and monocytes compared with MCT/LCT, which had no effect |
| Nanhuck et al., 2009 [ | In vitro: human PMNs and PBMCs | OO | 18 h incubation | No difference in the production of lipid bodies from stimulated PMNs or PMBCs between the ILE groups |
| Reimund et al., 2004 [ | In vitro: human PBMCs | OO | 24 h incubation | Basal (non-stimulated) PBMC TNFα production decreased significantly for all ILEs in a dose-dependent manner; however, it was most preserved in the OO group compared with SO ( |
| Versleijen et al., 2010 [ | In vitro: human neutrophils | OO | 1 h incubation | Basal elimination capacity (pneumococcal elimination mean ± SD: 75% ± 3%) decreased significantly for all ILEs; however, it was most preserved in the OO group (70% ± 6%; |
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| Garnacho-Montero et al., 2002 [ | Rats | OO ( | 4 day | OO caused less disruption of bacterial clearing |
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| Badía-Tahull et al., 2010 [ | Gastrointestinal surgery (oncology) | OO ( | 5 day | Significantly fewer infections in the OO + FO group compared with the OO group (3 vs. 11; |
| Demirer et al., 2016 [ | Abdominal surgery (oncology) | OO {100%} ( | ≥4 day | No significant difference in cytokines (TNFα and IL-6) between groups; however, lower levels were observed for the OO group |
| García-de-Lorenzo et al, 2005 [ | Patients with severe burns | OO ( | 6 day | Significant reduction in TNFα from baseline for OO |
| Jia et al., 2015 [ | ICU | OO ( | 5–14 day | Fewer infections in OO-based PN group |
| Mateu-de Antonio | ICU patients | OO ( | ≥5 day | No effect on infection rate, acute-phase proteins, and major health outcomes |
| Olthof et al., 2013 [ | Long-term PN | OO ( | ≥6 months | No significant difference between groups in C-reactive protein. Values within normal reference range |
| Olthof et al., 2016 [ | Long-term PN | OO ( | ≥3 months | TNFα production by PBMCs increased 3.6-fold in the OO group compared with controls ( |
| Onar et al., 2011 [ | Abdominal surgery (oncology) | OO ( | 7 day | No significant difference in infection rates between OO and SO ILEs |
| Reimund et al., 2005 [ | Long-term PN | OO ( | 3 months | No significant modifications in measured inflammatory (e.g., TNFα and IL-6) and immune parameters concentrations |
| Siqueira et al., 2011 [ | Healthy subjects | OO (NR) | 24 h infusion of each intervention (random order) * | No differences in inflammatory markers (TNFα, IL-6, or C-reactive protein) or immune function parameters (granulocyte or monocyte phagocytosis, and granulocyte or monocyte ROS generation) between groups |
| Umpierrez et al., 2012 [ | Surgical ICU | OO ( | Maximum 28 day | No difference in plasma inflammatory markers (C-reactive protein, IL-6, and TNFα), or immune cell function (granulocyte or monocyte phagocytosis, granulocyte or monocyte ROS generation), and similar rates of infections between OO and SO ILEs |
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| Demirel et al., 2012 [ | ≤32 week | OO ( | 14 day | No significant differences in sepsis rates between OO and SO ILEs |
| Gawecka et al., 2008 [ | <1500 g and <32 week | OO ( | 14 day | Anti-CD3 stimulated IL-6 increased significantly in the SO compared with OO/SO group. No difference in stimulated or unstimulated TNFα and IL-10 between groups |
| Koksal et al., 2011 [ | ≤34 week | OO ( | 7 day | No significant differences in sepsis rates between OO and SO ILEs |
| Savini et al., 2013 [ | 500–1249 g | OO ( | 21 day | No significant differences in sepsis rates between the 5 tested ILEs |
| Wang et al., 2016 [ | <2000 g and <37 week | OO ( | >14 day | No significant differences in sepsis rates between OO and SO ILEs |
| Wang et al., 2016 [ | <2000 g and <37 week | OO ( | >14 day | No significant differences in sepsis rates between the 5 tested ILEs |
* Patients (n = 12) received a 24-h infusion of each lipid emulsion (in random order) on 2 consecutive days. CRP—C-reactive protein; FO—fish oil-based ILE; ICU—intensive care unit; IL—interleukin; ILE—intravenous lipid emulsions; LCT—long-chain triglycerides; MCT—medium-chain triglycerides; MCT/LCT—ILEs that combine soybean LCT and MCTs from coconut oil; OO—olive oil-based ILE; PBMCs—peripheral blood mononuclear cells; PMNs—polymorphonuclear cells; PN—parenteral nutrition; ROS—reactive oxygen species; SL—Structolipid; SO—soybean oil-based ILE; SO/MCT/FO—ILE that combines soybean LCT, MCTs, and fish oil; SO/MCT/OO/FO—ILE that combines soybean LCT, MCTs, olive oil, and fish oil; TNFα—tumor necrosis factor alpha.
Figure 3TNFα and IL-6 levels in adult patients undergoing major abdominal surgery (N = 52). Reprinted from Demirer, S.; et al. Effects of postoperative parenteral nutrition with different lipid emulsions in patients undergoing major abdominal surgery. Annals Surg Treat Res 2016, 91, 309–315. CC BY 4.0 [34]. IL-6—interleukin 6; MCT/LCT—medium-chain triglycerides/long-chain triglycerides; postop—postoperative; preop—pre-operative; TNFα—tumor necrosis factor α.
Figure 4Infection rates in adult surgical patients (N = 458) [20]. * p < 0.05.
Effects of olive oil-based intravenous lipid emulsions on lipid peroxidation.
| Study | Population | Intervention and Control | Duration | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Watkins et al., 1998 [ | In vitro: HT-29 human colonic adenocarcinoma cells | Oleic acid | 36 h | ROS production was: oleic acid 6%; linoleic acid 35%, arachidonic acid 94%, eicosapentaenoic acid 40%, and docosahexaenoic acid 429% greater than control |
| Nanhuck et al., 2009 [ | In vitro: isolated human PBMCs and PMNs | OO | 18 h | In both PMBCs and PMNs, OO and SO consistently showed no effects on LTB4, FO dramatically increased LTB4 in both LPS-stimulated and unstimulated cells |
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| Fuhrman et al., 2006 [ | BALB/c mice | Oleic acid | 2 h | Oxidative stress responses increased after intake of all unsaturated fatty acids and oil supplements. However, FO and docosahexaenoic acid induced the greatest increases compared with saline |
| Xu et al., 2016 [ | Guinea pigs | OO | 10 day | MDA levels were increased in the SO, FO, and SMOF groups, with the highest levels seen in the FO group and the lowest seen in the OO group (OO vs. FO; |
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| Demirer et al., 2016 [ | Abdominal surgery (oncology) | OO {100%} ( | ≥4 day | TAS decreased slightly in all groups ( |
| Jia et al., 2015 [ | ICU | OO ( | 5–14 day | F2-I and MDA were not significantly different from baseline or between groups |
| Onar et al., 2011 [ | Abdominal surgery (oncology) | OO ( | 7 day | TBARS increased in both groups, no significant difference between groups |
| Olthof et al., 2013 [ | Long-term PN | OO ( | ≥6 months | Total glutathione concentration was not different between groups, oxidized glutathione was higher in PN group ( |
| Reimund et al., 2005 [ | Long-term PN | OO ( | 3 months | Vitamin E and MDA did not change from baseline to 3 months |
| Umpierrez et al., 2012 [ | ICU | OO ( | 28 day | Markers of oxidative stress were similar between groups at baseline, Day 3, and Day 7 |
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| Goulet et al., 1999 [ | Long-term PN | OO ( | Mean >30 months | LV-TBARS ( |
| Hartman et al., 2009 [ | Bone marrow transplant | OO ( | 14 day | TBARS and vitamin E did not change from baseline and there were no differences between groups |
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| Deshpande et al., 2014 [ | <30 week | OO ( | 7 day | F2-I did not change from baseline in the OO group and decreased in the FO group. Difference between groups in change from baseline was significant ( |
| Deshpande et al., 2009 [ | 23–28 week | OO ( | 5 day | F2-I decreased significantly in both groups (OO |
| Koksal et al., 2011 [ | ≤34 week | OO ( | 7 day | TAC decreased in both groups from baseline, but there was no difference between groups |
| Pitkanen et al., 2004 [ | 28–33 week | OO (0.48 g/kg/day) | 3 h * | Pentane levels significantly increased in both groups during PN infusion, difference between groups was not significant |
| Roggero et al., 2010 [ | 28–33 week | OO ( | 7 day | F2-I and TRAP concentrations were not statistically different within and among the 3 groups at any time of the study. No significant interaction effect between the type of lipid emulsion administered and the repeated values of F2-I and TRAP was found. F2-I values showed a trend to decrease throughout the study in all the 3 groups |
| Unal et al., 2017 [ | 25–32 week | OO ( | Median 7 day | TAC, TOS, and OSI significantly decreased from baseline to Week 3 in both groups (all |
| Webb et al., 2008 [ | 25 week–7 day | OO ( | 5 day | F2-I levels were not different between groups at baseline or Day 5 |
* Patients (n = 13) received a 3-h infusion of each lipid emulsion (in random order) on 2 consecutive days. F2-I—F2-isoprostane; LV—low-density lipoprotein + very low-density lipoprotein; MCT/LCT—medium-chain triglycerides/long-chain triglycerides; MDA—malondialdehyde; OO—olive oil; OSI—oxidative stress index; PBMC—peripheral blood mononuclear cells; PMNs—polymorphonuclear cells; PN—parenteral nutrition; SMOF—soybean oil/MCT/olive oil/fish oil; SO—soybean oil; TAC—total antioxidant capacity; TAS—total antioxidant status; TBARS—thiobarbituric acid reactive substances; TOS—total oxidant status; TRAP—total radical-trapping antioxidant potential.
Effects of olive oil-based intravenous lipid emulsions on plasma cholesterol and triglyceride levels.
| Study | Population | Intervention and Control ( | Duration | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Harvey et al., 2014 [ | Guinea pigs | OO | 6 h infusion | During 6 h infusion, TG increased significantly in all groups; however, greatest increase in SO group |
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| García-de-Lorenzo et al., 2005 [ | Severe burns | OO ( | 6 day | TG increased from baseline significantly in both groups and TC increased from baseline significantly in OO group. Between-group differences were not significant |
| Gultekin et al., 2014 [ | Sepsis or septic shock | OO ( | 5 day | No difference from baseline to final measurement for TC, TG, LDL, or VLDL in both groups. HDL significantly decreased from baseline to final measurement in the OO group ( |
| Huschak et al., 2005 [ | Trauma | OO ( | 14 day | No difference between groups in TG |
| Olthof et al., 2013 [ | Long-term PN | OO ( | ≥6 months | TG levels were significantly higher in the PN group; however, TG levels were within normal ranges (as specified in the article) for both groups |
| Onar et al., 2011 [ | Abdominal surgery (oncology) | OO ( | 7 day | TC, LDL, VLDL, and HDL decreased from baseline in the OO group, no significant difference between groups |
| Pálová et al., 2008 [ | Malnourished ≥10% decreased bodyweight | OO ( | 14 day | TG deteriorated† in 1/11 patients in OO group vs. 7/10 in SO group ( |
| Piper et al., 2009 [ | Abdominal or major maxillofacial surgery (oncology) | OO ( | 5 day | TG increased from baseline in both groups, and the increase was greater in the OO group. TG levels remained mostly within normal range * |
| Puiggròs et al., 2009 [ | Abdominal surgery | OO ( | 5 day | No change from baseline in TC, HDL, LDL, or TG in OO group, all values within normal ranges. No difference between groups for any of these measures |
| Reimund et al., 2005 [ | Long-term PN | OO ( | 3 months | No change from baseline in TC, HDL, LDL, or TG in OO group |
| Siqueira et al., 2011 [ | Healthy volunteers | OO (NR) | 24-h infusion of each intervention (random order) ‡ | TG significantly increased from baseline in OO and SO groups compared with saline |
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| Goulet et al., 1999 [ | Long-term PN | OO ( | Mean >30 months | TC, HDL, LDL, and TG decreased in OO group and increased in SO group |
| Hartman et al., 2009 [ | Bone marrow transplant | OO ( | 14 day | TC decreased from baseline in both groups; however, the decrease was significantly greater in the OO group ( |
| Kurvinen et al., 2011 [ | Intestinal failure | OO ( | 3 months | TC was significantly lower in the OO group; however, TC remained within normal range * in both groups |
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| Demirel et al., 2012 [ | ≤32 week | OO ( | 14 day | TC and TG within normal ranges * in both groups. No significant differences between groups except for VLDL, which was significantly higher in the OO group ( |
| Koksal et al., 2011 [ | ≤34 week | OO ( | 7 day | TC, VLDL, and TG increased, no significant difference between groups. All measures were within normal ranges * |
| Pitkanen et al., 2004 [ | 28–33 week | OO (0.48 g/kg/day) | 3 h § | TG increased significantly ( |
| Wang et al., 2016 [ | <2000 g and | OO ( | >14 day | No significant differences were observed in TC, TG, apolipoprotein A-I, apolipoprotein B, Lp(a), and apolipoprotein A-I/B among the groups. However, on Day 7, HDL level in the MCT/LCT group (0.89 ± 0.31 mmol/L) was significantly lower than in the OO (1.06 ± 0.40 mmol/L) or SO (1.05 ± 0.33 mmol/L) groups ( |
* Normal ranges based on ATPIII values: TG <150 mg/dL (1.69 mmol/L); TC 150–199 mg/dL (3.88–5.15 mmol/L); HDL ≥40 mg/dL (1.04 mmol/L); LDL ≤130 mg/dL (3.36 mmol/L) [68]. † Deterioration defined as a patient who moved to a more abnormal category after starting PN. Categories: within normal limits, elevation up to 2 × ULN, and elevation > 2 × ULN. ‡ Patients (n = 12) received a 24-h infusion of each lipid emulsion (in random order) on 2 consecutive days. § Patients (n = 13) received a 3-h infusion of each lipid emulsion (in random order) on 2 consecutive days. ATPIII—Adult Treatment Panel III; HDL—high-density lipoprotein; LDL—low-density lipoprotein; MCT/LCT—medium-chain triglycerides/long-chain triglycerides; NR—not reported; OO—olive oil; SMOF—soybean oil/MCT/olive oil/fish oil; SO—soybean oil; TC—total cholesterol; TG—triglycerides; ULN—upper limit of normal range; VLDL—very low-density lipoprotein.
Effects of olive oil-based intravenous lipid emulsions on markers of liver function.
| Study | Population | Intervention and Control | Duration | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Badía-Tahull et al., 2010 [ | Gastrointestinal surgery | OO ( | 5 day | No significant differences between groups in LFTs (ALT, ALP, and GGT) at Day 6 |
| García-de-Lorenzo et al., 2005 [ | Severe burns | OO ( | 6 day | At Day 6, of 11 MCT/LCT and 9 OO patients, more in the MCT/LCT group had abnormal LFTs: ALT 8 vs. 4, AST 6 vs. 5, ALP 7 vs. 3, GGT 9 vs. 6, and bilirubin (total or conjugated) 4 vs. 2 |
| Grau et al., 2007 [ | ICU | OO or MCT/LCT ( | Not pre-specified | Multivariate analysis showed TPN is significantly associated with LD ( |
| Jia et al., 2015 [ | ICU | OO ( | 5–14 day | LFTs generally within normal limits |
| Klek et al., 2017 [ | Long-term PN | OO ( | 12 months | No significant change from BL for ALT, AST, AP, or GGT for SO, MCT, or SMOF. |
| Onar et al., 2011 [ | Abdominal surgery (oncologic) | OO ( | 7 day | ALP and GGT significantly increased from BL ( |
| Pálová et al., 2008 [ | Malnourished ≥10% decreased body weight | OO ( | 14 day | No significant difference between groups in number of patients with deterioration ‡ in cytosolic enzymes (1 SO [ALT] vs. 1 OO [AST]) |
| Piper et al., 2009 [ | Abdominal surgery or major maxillofacial surgery | OO ( | 5 day | Mean AST significantly lower in SMOF vs. OO group at Day 2 (27 vs. 47 U/L, |
| Puiggròs et al., 2009 [ | Abdominal surgery | OO ( | 5 day | No significant differences between groups in changes from BL to Day 6 for LFTs (ALT, AST, ALP, GGT, and total bilirubin) |
| Reimund et al., 2005 [ | Long-term PN | OO ( | 3 months | No significant changes from BL in bilirubin (total and conjugated), AST, ALT, ALP, and GGT at Month 3 |
| Thomas-Gibson et al., 2004 [ | Long-term PN | OO ( | 6 months SO followed by 6 months OO followed by 6 months SO § | In 12 patients with >2 mo OO PN, bilirubin was within normal limits and AST was ≤15% outside normal range at BL. LFTs increased transiently in 4 patients and were persistently high in 1 severely septic patient who also had abnormal levels at baseline |
| Vahedi et al., 2005 [ | Long-term PN | MCT/LCT {50%/50%)}run-in, followed by | 3 months | No differences between groups in changes in LFTs from BL to Day 90 |
| Wang et al., 2013 [ | Resectable esophageal cancer | EN + OO PN ( | PN 7 day, EN added after Day 7 | Liver function was measured at regular intervals; results not reported |
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| Goulet et al., 1999 [ | Long-term PN | OO ( | Mean >30 months | No significant differences between groups in changes from BL to Day 60 in bilirubin (total and conjugated), LFTs (AST, ALT, ALP, and GGT) and biliary acids |
| Hartman et al., 2009 [ | Bone marrow transplant | OO ( | 14 day | No significant differences for LFTs between groups |
| Kurvinen et al., 2011 [ | Long-term PN | OO ( | >3 months | ALT, AST, GGT, and bilirubin remained close to normal or within the normal range during follow-up # |
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| Demirel et al., 2012 [ | <32 wk | OO ( | 14 day | LFTs normal and similar in both groups at 14th day of life |
| Deshpande et al., 2014 [ | <30 wk | OO ( | 7 day | No significant difference between groups in bilirubin (total and conjugated) or LFTs (ALT and GGT) on Day 8; values within normal limits in both groups |
| Gobel et al., 2003 [ | NICU patients, gestational age 28–36 wk | OO ( | 7 day | No significant differences between groups for changes from BL to Day 8 for LFTs (bilirubin [total and conjugated], AST, ALT, ALP, and GGT) |
| Koksal et al., 2011 [ | ≤34 wk | OO ( | 7 day | AST, ALT, and bilirubin (total and indirect) decreased from BL to Day 7 while ALP and GGT increased in both groups (NS) |
| Savini et al., 2013 [ | 500–1249 g | OO ( | 21 day | No significant differences between groups in mean AST, ALT, ALP, GGT, or bilirubin (total and conjugated) at 6 weeks of age |
| Wang et al., 2016 [ | <2000 g and <37 wk | OO ( | >14 day | Mean total bilirubin elevated at BL in both groups (OO 2.75 mg/dL, SO 38.80 mg/dL). At Day 7, mean values significantly increased in OO group (8.35 mg/dL) and significantly decreased in SO group (9.00 mg/dL) ( |
| Wang et al., 2016 [ | <2000 g and <37 wks | OO ( | >14 day | Total and direct bilirubin highest at Day 7 in all groups |
| Webb et al., 2008 [ | ≥25 wk | OO ( | 5 day | LFTs were similar in both groups at BL and Day 5 |
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| Dai et al., 2016 [ | SLR and meta-analysis of RCTs: Neonates, infants, children, and adults | OO 8 studies | Various | No differences for any analyses of total bilirubin. |
| Edward et al., 2017 [ | SLR of 17 RCTs in hospitalized pediatric patients | OO 7 studies (control in 1 study control) | Various | The evidence does not point toward a particular ILE being superior in terms of effect on liver enzymes or total bilirubin. The majority of studies did not find significant differences between use of different ILEs and liver enzymes |
| Hojsak et al., 2016 [ | SLR and meta-analysis of 23 RCTs: Preterm neonates, infants, and children | OO 2 studies | Various | Meta-analysis showed no differences in the rate of cholestasis or bilirubin levels associated with short-term use of different ILEs in preterm infants, neonates, and children |
* Cholestasis defined as a value > ULN for 2 of 3 parameters (conjugated bilirubin, AP, and GGT) during treatment. † Cytolysis defined as a value > 2 × ULN for AST and/or ALT during treatment. ‡ Deterioration defined as a patient who moved to a more abnormal category after starting PN. Categories: within normal limits, elevation up to 2 × ULN, and elevation > 2 × ULN. § n = 12. # Excluded 1 patient with >20-fold increase in serum PS decreased together with ALT and bilirubin after transition from SO-based to OO-based PN after inclusion in the study. α-GST—alpha-glutathione S-transferase; ALP—alkaline phosphatase; ALT—alanine aminotransferase; AST—aspartate aminotransferase; BL—baseline; EN—enteral nutrition; EOT—end of treatment; FO—fish oil; GI—gastrointestinal; GGT—gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase; ILE—intravenous lipid emulsion; LCT—long-chain triacylglycerol; LD—liver dysfunction; LFT—liver function test; MCT—medium-chain triacylglycerol; MSF—50% MCTs/40% SO/10% FO; NEC—necrotizing enterocolitis; NICU—neonatal intensive care unit; OO—olive oil; OR—odds ratio; PN—parenteral nutrition; postop—postoperatively; PNALD—PN-associated liver disease; PS—phytosterol; RCT—randomized controlled trial; SBS—short-bowel syndrome; SLR—systematic literature review; SMOF—30% SO/30% MCT/25% OO/15% FO; SO—soybean oil; TG—triglyceride; ULN—upper limit of normal range; VLBW—very low birth weight.
Figure 5Liver enzymes in adult surgical patients; (A) alanine aminotransferase, (B) aspartate aminotransferase, (C) alkaline phosphatase, (D) gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, and (E) total bilirubin. Black bars denote olive oil-based ILE, white bars denote soybean oil-based ILE, solid horizontal line denotes upper limit of normal range, dotted horizontal line denotes 1.5 × ULN. Values up to 1.5 × ULN are not considered clinically meaningful [20]. * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.005. EOT—end of therapy; ILE—intravenous lipid emulsion; ULN—upper limit of normal range.
Figure 6Adhesion and emigration of LPS-induced leukocytes in a rat model. Reprinted from Demirer, S.; et al. Effects of postoperative parenteral nutrition with different lipid emulsions in patients undergoing major abdominal surgery. Annals Surg Treat Res 2016, 91, 309–315. CC BY 4.0. * p < 0.05. LPS—lipopolysaccharide; MCT/LCT—medium-chain triglycerides/long-chain triglycerides.