| Literature DB >> 35807740 |
Jamie Bering1, John K DiBaise1.
Abstract
While the history of nutrition support dates to the ancient world, modern home parenteral and enteral nutrition (HPEN) has been available since the 1960s. Home enteral nutrition is primarily for patients in whom there is a reduction in oral intake below the amount needed to maintain nutrition or hydration (i.e., oral failure), whereas home parenteral nutrition is used for patients when oral-enteral nutrition is temporarily or permanently impossible or absorption insufficient to maintain nutrition or hydration (i.e., intestinal failure). The development of home delivery of these therapies has revolutionized the field of clinical nutrition. The use of HPEN appears to be increasing on a global scale, and because of this, it is important for healthcare providers to understand all that HPEN entails to provide safe, efficacious, and cost-effective support to the HPEN patient. In this article, we provide a comprehensive review of the indications, patient requirements, monitoring, complications, and overall process of managing these therapies at home. Whereas some of the information in this article may be applicable to the pediatric patient, the focus is on the adult population.Entities:
Keywords: complications; enteral nutrition; home enteral nutrition; home parenteral nutrition; indications; parenteral nutrition; quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35807740 PMCID: PMC9268549 DOI: 10.3390/nu14132558
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 6.706
Indications for HPEN.
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Dysphagia Neurologic disorders such as ALS, systemic sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease, cerebrovascular accident |
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Malignancy and/or ongoing treatments such as radiationHypercatabolic states Cystic fibrosis Burns Malignancy Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease Chronic infection |
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Preoperative or postoperative malnutrition Upper gastrointestinal obstruction Esophageal stricture Gastric outlet obstruction (malignancy, pancreatitis, etc.) |
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Malabsorptive or maldigestive states Inflammatory bowel disease Exocrine pancreatic insufficiency/chronic pancreatitis Cirrhosis Cystic fibrosis |
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Severe gastric dysmotility |
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Chronic intestinal obstruction or pseudoobstruction Short bowel syndrome Preoperative or postoperative malnutrition Intestinal injury/trauma High-output stoma or enterocutaneous fistula Inability to supply or maintain nutrition via enteral access |
Central venous catheters.
| Type of Catheter | Duration | Pro | Con |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Short-term |
Ease of insertion and removal Cost-effective Accessibility |
May have an increased risk of thrombosis and displacement |
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| Long-term |
Low risk of infection Easier site care Patient comfort |
Requires surgical placement and removal Requires a needle to access the port limiting use in patients who requiring daily line access |
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| Long-term |
Low risk of infection compared to non-tunneled |
Requires surgical insertion |
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| Short-term |
Ease of insertion, can be done at bedside |
High rate of infection Patient discomfort |
General education topics for HPN administration.
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Hand hygiene Aseptic technique to access and maintain catheter and catheter site PN administration including multivitamin and insulin additives How to use tubing, caps, and other supplies Starting and stopping PN infusion Programming the infusion pump How and where to obtain supplies How to manage supply or PN contamination Who to contact with questions or concerns |
Recommended laboratory monitoring for HPN.
| Laboratory Timing | Laboratory Studies * |
|---|---|
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| Complete blood count |
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| Basic metabolic panel |
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| Complete blood count |
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| Same as baseline |
* Note: Abnormal vitamin and trace element levels at baseline should be monitored more frequently until levels normalize after supplementation commences.
Risk factors for refeeding syndrome.
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BMI < 18.5 Unintentional weight loss > 10% of total body weight Little or no nutritional intake Low levels of potassium, magnesium, or phosphate prior to feeding Comorbidities that predispose to malnutrition including anorexia nervosa, malignancy, advanced age, alcohol/substance misuse or abuse |
Factors affecting the quality of life of patients on HPEN.
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Formula infusion time Duration of nutritional support therapies Sleep disturbance related to nutrition infusion and equipment Family and social life disturbance Recreational activity limitations from implanted medical devices Involvement in support group |