| Literature DB >> 31881984 |
Paweł Piwowarczyk1, Paweł Kutnik2, Michał Borys3, Elżbieta Rypulak3, Beata Potręć-Studzińska3, Justyna Sysiak-Sławecka3, Tomasz Czarnik4, Mirosław Czuczwar3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nutrition plays a major role in intensive care unit (ICU) treatment, influencing ICU length of stay and patient's survival. If preferable enteral nutrition administration is not feasible, ESPEN and ASPEN guidelines recommend initiation of a supplemental parenteral route between the first and seventh day, but exact timing remains elusive. While rapid development in critical care enabled significant reduction in the mortality rate of ICU patients, this improvement also tripled the number of patients going to rehabilitation. Thus, it is quality of life after ICU that has become the subject of interest of clinicians and healthcare policy-makers. A growing body of evidence indicates that protein turnover in the early phase of critical illness may play a crucial role in the preservation of lean body mass. A negative protein balance may lead to muscle wasting that persists weeks and months after ICU stay, resulting in deterioration of physical functioning. Folliwing oncological gastrointestinal tract surgery, patients are threatened with negative protein turnover due to cancer and extensive surgical insult.Entities:
Keywords: ICU; Supplemental parenteral nutrition; cancer; gastrointestinal surgery; protein; quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31881984 PMCID: PMC6935061 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-019-3796-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Eligibility criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | |
|---|---|---|
1. ICU patients in the acute phase of critical illness after gastrointestinal oncological surgery 2. Age ≥18 years 3. Central venous access available for continuous infusion of the study drugs 4. Admitted to the ICU during the previous 24 h with a minimum expected ICU stay of ≥5 days 5. Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score ≥ 2 6. Written informed consent from the patient or the patient’s legal representative | Exclusions associated with nutritional status: 1. Received parenteral nutrition within 7 days before randomisation 2. Expected to receive ≥20% of energy via supplemental EN and/or non-nutritional sources (e.g. glucose solution for drug dilution or lipids from propofol) during the first 3 nutritional treatment days 3. Inability to initiate EN prior to randomization 4. Body mass index <17 kg/m2 or >35 kg/m2 5. Any congenital errors of amino acid metabolism Exclusions associated with comorbidities and allergies: 6. Known hypersensitivity to fish, egg, soybean proteins, peanut proteins, or to any of the active substances or excipients contained in SPN 7. Known hypersensitivity to milk protein or to any other substance contained in SPN 8. Hemophagocytic syndrome 9. Known history of HIV, hepatitis B and/or C 10. Any severe, persistent blood coagulation disorder with uncontrolled bleeding Concomitant therapy exclusions: 11. Chronic maintenance therapy with systemic glucocorticoid steroids (hydrocortisone >0.3 mg/kg/d). 12. Concomitant administration of chemotherapy 13. Administration of growth hormone and teduglutide within the previous 4 weeks | Laboratory exclusions: 14. Hypertriglyceridemia characterised by serum triglyceride levels >4 mmol/L (>350 mg/dL) 15. Treatment-refractory, clinically significant major abnormality in the serum concentration of any electrolyte (sodium, potassium, magnesium, total calcium, chloride, inorganic phosphate) 16. Acute liver failure with encephalopathy, including intoxication (e.g. paracetamol, death cap, golden chain) and/or liver enzymes (aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, gamma glutamyl transferase) or bilirubin exceeding 10 x upper limit normal Other exclusions: 17. Chronic liver failure (Child-Pugh scale B or C), e.g. secondary to drug or alcohol abuse 18. Participation in another interventional clinical trial within the previous 4 weeks 19. Pregnancy or lactation 20. Previous inclusion in the present study 21. Patient unlikely to survive to 6 months due to underlying illness 22. Receiving end-of-life-care |
EN enteral nutrition, ICU intensive care unit, SPN supplemental parenteral nutrition
Fig. 1Chart flow
Fig. 2Study period