| Literature DB >> 32401992 |
Letiane de Souza Machado1, Paula Rizzi1, Flávia Moraes Silva2.
Abstract
This systematic review of longitudinal studies aimed to evaluate the effect of enteral feeding of critically ill adult and pediatric patients in the prone position on gastric residual volume and other clinical outcomes. A literature search was conducted in the databases PubMed, Scopus and Embase using terms related to population and intervention. Two independent reviewers analyzed the titles and abstracts, and data collection was performed using a standardized form. Discrepancies were resolved by a third reviewer. The methodological quality of the studies was evaluated considering the potential for systematic errors, and the data were qualitatively analyzed. Four studies with adult patients and one with preterm patients were included. The gastric residual volume was evaluated as the main outcome: three studies did not show differences in the gastric residual volume between the prone and supine positions (p > 0.05), while one study showed a higher gastric residual volume during enteral feeding in the prone position (27.6mL versus 10.6mL; p < 0.05), and another group observed a greater gastric residual volume in the supine position (reduction of the gastric residual volume by 23.3% in the supine position versus 43.9% in the prone position; p < 0.01). Two studies evaluated the frequency of vomiting; one study found that it was higher in the prone position (30 versus 26 episodes; p < 0.001), while the other study found no significant difference (p > 0.05). The incidence of aspiration pneumonia and death were evaluated in one study, with no difference between groups (p > 0.05). The literature on the administration of enteral feeding in the prone position in critically ill patients is sparse and of limited quality, and the results regarding gastric residual volume are contradictory. Observational studies with appropriate sample sizes should be conducted to support conclusions on the subject.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32401992 PMCID: PMC7206938 DOI: 10.5935/0103-507x.20200019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rev Bras Ter Intensiva ISSN: 0103-507X
Search strategy employed in the PubMed® database
| Nutrition Therapy[Title/Abstract]) OR Nutrition Therapy, Medical[Title/Abstract]) OR Therapy, Medical Nutrition[Title/Abstract]) OR Support, Nutritional[Title/ Abstract]) OR Nutritional Support[Title/Abstract]) OR Artificial Feeding[Title/ Abstract]) OR Feeding, Artificial[Title/Abstract])) OR ((((((((((((((Enteral Feeding[Title/Abstract]) OR Feeding, Enteral[Title/Abstract]) OR Force Feeding[Title/Abstract]) OR Feeding, Force[Title/Abstract]) OR Feedings, Force[Title/Abstract]) OR Force Feedings[Title/Abstract]) OR Tube Feeding[Title/ Abstract]) OR Feeding, Tube[Title/Abstract]) OR Gastric Feeding Tubes[Title/ Abstract]) OR Feeding Tube, Gastric[Title/Abstract]) OR Feeding Tubes, Gastric[Title/Abstract]) OR Gastric Feeding Tube[Title/Abstract]) OR Tube, Gastric Feeding[Title/Abstract]) OR Tubes, Gastric Feeding[Title/Abstract]))) AND (((((Prone position[Title/Abstract]) OR Position, Prone[Title/Abstract]) OR Positions, Prone[Title/Abstract]) OR Prone Positions[Title/Abstract]) OR Pronation[Title/Abstract]) |
Figure 1Flowchart of study selection.
General characteristics of studies on the administration of enteral nutrition in the prone position for critically ill patients
| Author, location | Design, follow-up | Sample | Interventions under study | Outcomes of interest |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Saez de la Fuente et al.( | Prospective observational study | n = 34 Adult patients on MV with prescription of ENT in prone position | Control: supine position, with interruption of enteral nutrition if GRV > 500 mL in 6 hours. Enteral feeding via infusion pump for 24 hours. Initial volume of 25% of the nutritional target achieved in 96 hours | GRV (measured every 6 hours) Vomiting Regurgitation |
| Reignier et al.( | Prospective observational study | n = 71 (37 control/34 intervention) Adult clinical patients on invasive and MV and sedated with the prediction of ENT for at least 5 days | Control: semirecumbent supine position. Enteral feeding via infusion pump for 18 hours. Initial volume of 30 mL/hour; progression to nutritional target in 96 hours | GRV (measured every 6 hours) Vomiting MV-associated pneumonia Mortality |
| Chen et al.( | Crossover randomized series Duration: 8.5 hours | n = 35 Convenience sample of preterm infants with Apgar score > 7 who were receiving ENT and were clinically stable | Participants were allocated to two groups: in one group, the sequence of positions was supine-prone, and in the other group, the sequence was prone-supine. | GRV (measured 30, 60, 90, 120 and 150 minutes after BM infusion) |
| Van der Voort et al.( | Prospective observational study Duration: 12 hours | n = 19 Adult patients on MV in the prone position with onset of ENT during the first 24 hours of ICU stay Age: 65.1 (41 - 82) years Men: 73.7% Apache II: 25.5 ± 8.9 points | Control: supine position for 6 hours, with head of the bed elevated at 30°. Enteral feeding 80 mL/hour as nutritional target | GRV (measured every 6 hours) |
| Lucchini et al.( | Retrospective observational study Information about follow-up period not provided | n = 25 patients with ARDS on MV and continuous ENT | Control: supine position with head of the bed elevated to at least 15º | GRV (measured every 3 hours) |
ENT - Enteral nutritional therapy; MV - mechanical ventilation; APACHE II - Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II; GRV - gastric residual volume; PaO2 - arterial pressure of oxygen; FiO2 - fraction of inspired oxygen; SAPS II - Simplified Acute Physiology Score II; PEEP - positive end-expiratory pressure; BM - breast milk; OGT - orogastric tube; ICU - intensive care unit; ARDS - acute respiratory distress syndrome; RASS - Richmond Agitation and Sedation Scale.
Prokinetics were not administered during the study.
Effect of enteral nutrition in critically ill patients administered in prone position compared to supine position on clinical outcomes
| Author | Intolerance of ENT | Aspiration pneumonia | Other outcomes | Conclusion | Strengths and weaknesses |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Saez de la Fuente et al.( | GRV/day (p = 0.054): | Not evaluated | Not evaluated | ENT in critically ill patients with severe hypoxemia in prone position is viable and safe and is not associated with an increase in gastrointestinal complications | Weaknesses: |
| Reignier et al.( | GRV (mean of 5 days): | Associated with VM (NS): | Infused volume (mean of 5 days): | In severely hypoxemic patients on invasive MV, the administration of EN in the prone position is associated with a higher frequency of vomiting | Weaknesses: |
| Chen et al.( | Redução % do VRG: | Not evaluated | Not evaluated | Preterm infants have lower GRV in the prone position compared to the supine position, when 50 mL/kg/day and 100 mL/kg/day are offered | Weaknesses: |
| Van der Voort et al.( | VRG em 3 horas (p = 0,69): | Not evaluated | Not evaluated | GRV did not differ significantly after 3 and 6 hours of enteral nutrition in the prone or supine position | Weaknesses: |
| Lucchini et al.( | VRG (p = 0,73): | Not evaluated | Not evaluated | The administration of ENT in the prone position did not promote a significant increase in GRV compared to the supine position | Weaknesses: |
ENT - Enteral nutritional therapy; GRV - gastric residual volume; EN - enteral nutrition; RR - relative risk; MV - mechanical ventilation; NS - not significant; SAPS - Simplified Acute Physiology Score.
Methodological quality of studies on enteral nutrition administration in the prone position for critically ill patients: precision and risk of bias
| Author | Precision | Measurement bias | Confounding bias/multivariate analysis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Saez de la Fuente et al.( | High risk | Low risk | High risk |
| Reignier et al.( | High risk | Low risk | Uncertain risk |
| Chen et al.( | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
| Van der Voort et al.( | High risk | Low risk | Uncertain risk |
| Lucchini et al.( | High risk | Uncertain risk | Uncertain risk |