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Outcomes in relation to early parenteral nutrition use in preterm neonates born between 30 and 33 weeks' gestation: a propensity score matched observational study.
Webbe, JWH, Longford, N, Battersby, C, Oughham, K, Uthaya, SN, Modi, N, Gale, C
Archives of disease in childhood. Fetal and neonatal edition. 2022;(2):131-136
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To evaluate whether in preterm neonates parenteral nutrition use in the first 7 postnatal days, compared with no parenteral nutrition use, is associated with differences in survival and other important morbidities. Randomised trials in critically ill older children show that harms, such as nosocomial infection, outweigh benefits of early parenteral nutrition administration; there is a paucity of similar data in neonates. DESIGN Retrospective cohort study using propensity matching including 35 maternal, infant and organisational factors to minimise bias and confounding. SETTING National, population-level clinical data obtained for all National Health Service neonatal units in England and Wales. PATIENTS Preterm neonates born between 30+0 and 32+6 weeks+days. INTERVENTIONS The exposure was parenteral nutrition administered in the first 7 days of postnatal life; the comparator was no parenteral nutrition. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The primary outcome was survival to discharge from neonatal care. Secondary outcomes comprised the neonatal core outcome set. RESULTS 16 292 neonates were compared in propensity score matched analyses. Compared with matched neonates not given parenteral nutrition in the first postnatal week, neonates who received parenteral nutrition had higher survival at discharge (absolute rate increase 0.91%; 95% CI 0.53% to 1.30%), but higher rates of necrotising enterocolitis (absolute rate increase 4.6%), bronchopulmonary dysplasia (absolute rate increase 3.9%), late-onset sepsis (absolute rate increase 1.5%) and need for surgical procedures (absolute rate increase 0.92%). CONCLUSIONS In neonates born between 30+0 and 32+6 weeks' gestation, those given parenteral nutrition in the first postnatal week had a higher rate of survival but higher rates of important neonatal morbidities. Clinician equipoise in this area should be resolved by prospective randomised trials. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER NCT03767634.
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Early versus later initiation of parenteral nutrition for very preterm infants: a propensity score-matched observational study.
Uthaya, S, Longford, N, Battersby, C, Oughham, K, Lanoue, J, Modi, N
Archives of disease in childhood. Fetal and neonatal edition. 2022;(2):137-142
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OBJECTIVE To evaluate the impact of timing of initiation of parenteral nutrition (PN) after birth in very preterm infants. DESIGN Propensity-matched analysis of data from the UK National Neonatal Research Database. PATIENTS 65 033 babies <31 weeks gestation admitted to neonatal units in England and Wales between 2008 and 2019. INTERVENTIONS PN initiated in the first 2 days (early) versus after the second postnatal day (late). Babies who died in the first 2 days without receiving PN were analysed as 'late'. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The main outcome measure was morbidity-free survival to discharge. The secondary outcomes were survival to discharge, growth and other core neonatal outcomes. FINDINGS No difference was found in the primary outcome (absolute rate difference (ARD) between early and late 0.50%, 95% CI -0.45 to 1.45, p=0.29). The early group had higher rates of survival to discharge (ARD 3.3%, 95% CI 2.7 to 3.8, p<0.001), late-onset sepsis (ARD 0.84%, 95% CI 0.48 to 1.2, p<0.001), bronchopulmonary dysplasia (ARD 1.24%, 95% CI 0.30 to 2.17, p=0.01), treated retinopathy of prematurity (ARD 0.50%, 95% CI 0.17 to 0.84, p<0.001), surgical procedures (ARD 0.80%, 95% CI 0.20 to 1.40, p=0.01) and greater drop in weight z-score between birth and discharge (absolute difference 0.019, 95% CI 0.003 to 0.035, p=0.02). Of 4.9% of babies who died in the first 2 days, 3.4% were in the late group and not exposed to PN. CONCLUSIONS Residual confounding and survival bias cannot be excluded and justify the need for a randomised controlled trial powered to detect differences in important functional outcomes.
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Early Enteral Feeding Improves Tolerance of Parenteral Nutrition in Preterm Newborns.
Boscarino, G, Conti, MG, Di Chiara, M, Bianchi, M, Onestà, E, Faccioli, F, Deli, G, Repole, P, Oliva, S, Cresi, F, et al
Nutrients. 2021;(11)
Abstract
(1) Background: The tolerance of preterm newborns for the high nutritional intakes given by parenteral nutrition (PN) is still debated because of the risk of metabolic complications. Despite enteral nutrition (EN) being the preferred route of nutrition, an exclusive enteral feeding is not always possible, as in preterm newborns, the gut is immature and less tolerant of EN. We aimed to study the impact of a minimal enteral feeding (MEF) on the possible early metabolic complications of PN in a cohort of preterms with gestational age at birth GA ≤ 29 + 6/7 weeks of postmenstrual age. (2) Methods: We divided the study sample in two cohorts: 1) Late-Feeding (cohort 1), newborns who received MEF starting from the 8th day of age, and (2) Early-Feeding (cohort 2), newborns who received MEF, consisting of the administration of at least 4-5 mL/kg/day by the enteral route, in the first 7 days of age. The primary outcome of the study was the rate of at least one metabolic complication, including hyperglycemia, hypertriglyceridemia, or metabolic acidosis. (3) Results: We enrolled 80 newborns (Late-Feeding cohort 51 vs. Early-Feeding cohort 29). The rate of all metabolic complications was statistically higher in the Late-Feeding cohort compared to the Early-Feeding cohort. Binary logistic regression analysis showed that late administration of MEF negatively influenced the rate of all metabolic complications. (4) Conclusions: Early minimal administration of EN is associated with less frequent PN-related metabolic side effects and a higher rate of survival in critically ill newborns.
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Effects of different lipid emulsions on serum adipokines, inflammatory markers and mortality in critically ill patients with sepsis: A prospective observational cohort study.
Ulusoy, H, Kangalgil, M, Küçük, AO, Özdemir, A, Karahan, SC, Yaman, SÖ, Yavuz, HB, Ok, Ü
Clinical nutrition (Edinburgh, Scotland). 2021;(7):4569-4578
Abstract
BACKGROUND & AIMS Intravenous lipid emulsions in parenteral nutrition may cause different metabolic responses and immune effects in critically ill patients with sepsis. The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of different lipid emulsions on changes in concentrations of adipokine and cytokine and their relationship with mortality in patients. METHODS Patients enrolled in this prospective, single-center, observational cohort study, were estimated to require more than ten days of parenteral nutrition. They were treated with soybean oil-based or olive oil-based parenteral lipid emulsions. Adipokine and cytokine concentrations of septic patients were determined at enrollment and ten days after, in accordance with the diagnostic criteria of SEPSIS-3. The concentrations levels were measured in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Mortality was analyzed using the Kaplan-Meier method and Cox regressions. RESULTS Over a 25-month period, 145 patients were assessed for eligibility and consequently, 40 patients were analyzed. On admission, both groups had comparable physiological scores, comorbidities, malnutrition risk, anthropometric measurements, metabolic/hematologic biomarkers and concentrations of adipokines and cytokines (p > .05). Serum leptin, resistin, and cytokines (IL-6, IL-10, IL-1β and TNF-α) decreased significantly in the entire cohort over ten days following sepsis (p < .05). Serum resistin decreased in both olive oil-based and soybean oil-based lipid emulsions groups. Serum adiponectin only decreased in soybean oil-based lipid emulsions group (p < .05). There was association between survival and percentage changes in adiponectin, resistin and visfatin concentrations (log rank test: p < .05). CONCLUSION Adipokine and cytokine responses are affected by medical nutritional therapy in the sepsis process and adipokines may represent functional prognostic biomarkers in critically ill patients with sepsis.
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Effects of Probiotics on Intestinal Failure-Associated Liver Disease in Adult Patients Receiving Prolonged Parenteral Support: A Tertiary Care Center Experience.
Alomari, M, Nusairat, L, Al Momani, L, Chadalavada, P, Covut, F, Olayan, M, Young, M, Romero-Marrero, C
Nutrition in clinical practice : official publication of the American Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition. 2020;(3):454-463
Abstract
BACKGROUND It has been hypothesized that dysbiosis plays a significant role in the pathogenesis of intestinal failure-associated liver disease (IFALD). Therefore, we aimed to investigate the effect of probiotics on IFALD in patients receiving parenteral support, namely home parenteral nutrition (HPN) and home intravenous fluids (HIVFs). METHODS We retrospectively reviewed charts of patients with intestinal failure who received HPN or HIVF for >2 weeks at our tertiary center between January 2005 and August 2016. We excluded patients <18 years of age, patients with other causes of liver disease, patients who used probiotics for <30 days, patients with <6 months' follow-up, and those who had long-term antibiotic use (>30 days). Bivariable and multivariable logistic regression analyses were used in this study. RESULTS A total of 282 patients who received parenteral support were included. Eighty-five percent of our sample received PN. A total of 78 (27.7%) patients used probiotics. The prevalence of IFALD in patients who used probiotics was 35.9% vs 54.4% in patients who did not use probiotics, P = .005. In multivariable analysis, only small-bowel length of 10-90 cm and HPN use showed a significant impact on IFALD, odds ratio (OR) = 4.394 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.635-11.814; P = .003) and OR = 4.502 (95% CI 1.412-14.351; P = .011), respectively. CONCLUSION Our study revealed that the prevalence of IFALD was comparable among the probiotic users and nonusers. Only small bowel length of 1090 cm and HPN use showed a significant impact on IFALD.
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Evaluation of parenteral nutrition-associated liver disease in surgical infants for necrotizing enterocolitis.
Zeng, S, Li, X, Deng, C, Li, L, Guo, C
Medicine. 2020;(2):e18539
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The purpose of this study was to determine the factors associated with parenteral nutrition-associated liver disease (PNALD) in infants who underwent surgery for necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) and followed up the postoperative outcomes for long term parenteral nutrition (PN).This study included a retrospective review of 87 infants with NEC and managed surgically from July 2007 to May 2017 at the Children's Hospital, Chongqing Medical University. Clinical data and procedure information were collected and analyzed.Among the infants included, 16.1% of patients developed PNALD. Multivariable logistic regression analysis revealed progressive clinical deterioration (OR, 5.47; 95% CI, 1.10-26.96; P = .037) was independent risk factor for PNALD whereas congenital heart disease (OR, 0.068; 95% CI, 0.008-0.55; P = .012) presentation served as a protective factor.The current data suggested the distinct disease process for cardiac patients with NEC, which might help in the prevention and treatment of PNALD for patients with NEC.
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Role of heat shock protein and cytokine expression as markers of clinical outcomes with glutamine-supplemented parenteral nutrition in surgical ICU patients.
Wischmeyer, PE, Mintz-Cole, RA, Baird, CH, Easley, KA, May, AK, Sax, HC, Kudsk, KA, Hao, L, Tran, PH, Jones, DP, et al
Clinical nutrition (Edinburgh, Scotland). 2020;(2):563-573
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BACKGROUND Nutrients, such as glutamine (GLN), have been shown to effect levels of a family of protective proteins termed heat shock proteins (HSPs) in experimental and clinical critical illness. HSPs are believed to serve as extracellular inflammatory messengers and intracellular cytoprotective molecules. Extracellular HSP70 (eHSP70) has been termed a chaperokine due to ability to modulate the immune response. Altered levels of eHSP70 are associated with various disease states. Larger clinical trial data on GLN effect on eHSP expression and eHSP70's association with inflammatory mediators and clinical outcomes in critical illness are limited. OBJECTIVE Explore effect of longitudinal change in serum eHSP70, eHSP27 and inflammatory cytokine levels on clinical outcomes such as pneumonia and mortality in adult surgical intensive care unit (SICU) patients. Further, evaluate effect of parenteral nutrition (PN) supplemented with GLN (GLN-PN) versus GLN-free, standard PN (STD-PN) on serum eHSP70 and eHSP27 concentrations. METHODS Secondary observational analysis of a multicenter clinical trial in 150 adults after cardiac, vascular, or gastrointestinal surgery requiring PN support and SICU care conducted at five academic medical centers. Patients received isocaloric, isonitrogenous PN, with or without GLN dipeptide. Serum eHSP70 and eHSP27, interleukin-6 (IL-6), and 8 (IL-8) concentrations were analyzed in patient serum at baseline (prior to study PN) and over 28 days of follow up. RESULTS eHSP70 declined over time in survivors during 28 days follow-up, but non-survivors had significantly higher eHSP70 concentrations compared to survivors. In patients developing pneumonia, eHSP70, eHSP27, IL-8, and IL-6 were significantly elevated. Adjusted relative risk for hospital mortality was reduced 75% (RR = 0.25, p = 0.001) for SICU patients with a faster decline in eHSP70. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.85 (95% CI: 0.76 to 0.94) for the final model suggesting excellent discrimination between SICU survivors and non-survivors. GLN-PN did not alter eHSP70 or eHSP27 serum concentrations over time compared to STD-PN. CONCLUSION Our results suggest that serum HSP70 concentration may be an important marker for severity of illness and likelihood of recovery in the SICU. GLN-supplemented-PN did not increase eHSP70.
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Predictive factors of hyperglycaemia in patients with parenteral nutrition.
Sangrador Pelluz, C, Pardo Pastor, J, Navas Moya, E, Nicolás Picó, J, Quintana, S
Medicina clinica. 2020;(5):157-162
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To identify the predictive factors of hyperglycaemia in patients receiving parenteral nutrition (PN). MATERIAL AND METHODS Retrospective observational study (January 2016-December 2016) conducted in a 450-bed university hospital. Adult hospitalized patients who received total PN through a central line for at least 48hours were included. The required variables to characterize patients, and those related to the PN received were collected and hyperglycaemia was defined as 3 consecutive glycaemias greater than 150mg/dl or 2 greater than 180mg/dl. A descriptive, comparative bivariate statistical analysis was carried out, as well as a multivariate analysis using binary logistic regression (SPSS.v.24.) RESULTS 234 patients were included. The prevalence of hyperglycaemia in the population under study was 44.0%. The main differences observed in the bivariate analysis between hyperglycaemic and normoglycemic patients were related to age, previous comorbidities, medical department, presence of sepsis, duration and glucose contribution in PN, as well as blood glucose levels and corticosteroids. The predictors of hyperglycaemia obtained after the multivariate analysis were: renal clearance (OR=.982, 95% CI .968-.996, P=.010), pre-PN glycaemia (OR=1.039, 95% CI 1.026-1.051, P<.001), diabetes mellitus (OR=11.016, 95% CI 3.028-31.697, P<.001), intensive medicine (OR=3.303, 95% CI 1.183-9.219, P=.023), corticosteroids (OR=3.155, 95% CI 1.179-8.226, P=.022). CONCLUSIONS Decreased renal clearance, high blood glucose levels, diabetes, corticosteroid use, and critical patients are predictors of hyperglycaemia, therefore it would be advisable to consider them in the design of PN start formula.
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Parenteral Nutrition Complications in Children Undergoing Bone Marrow Transplantation.
Soussi, MA, Besbes, H, Mellouli, F, Drira, C, Lazreg, O, Belghith, A, Zouari, B, Zaouali, S, Bejaoui, M, Razgallah Khrouf, M
Journal of pediatric hematology/oncology. 2019;(7):e473-e477
Abstract
BACKGROUND Parenteral nutrition (PN) seems to be a practical solution to face the negative nutritional effects of bone marrow transplantation. OBJECTIVE Report and describe all observed PN-related complications in children undergoing allogenic bone marrow transplantation in a tertiary center and determine the possible risk factors. MATERIALS AND METHODS This was a retrospective and observational study including 51 allografted children 2 to 17 years of age. We collected from medical patient records any noticed PN-related complications using an assessment causality method. The independent risk factors for complications were investigated by multivariate analysis. RESULTS A total of 92% of patients (n=47) developed a total of 136 complications attributable to PN. The incidence rate of complications was 5 for 100 patient days of PN. Infectious complications (32.3%) and electrolytic disorders (27.9%) were the most common conditions identified during our study. Multivariate analysis showed that the duration of PN exposure, age, and hyperglycemia were the risk factors for the onset of these complications. CONCLUSIONS Although we have noticed multiple complications attributable to PN, a certain causal link is difficult to establish in this particular context. Emphasizing enteral nutrition in bone marrow graft protocols would be the best way to avoid these complications.
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Treatment in a Tertiary Intestinal Rehabilitation Center Improves Outcome for Children With Short Bowel Syndrome.
Vugrinec Mamić, M, Hojsak, I, Mišak, Z, Kerman, V, Kolaček, S
Gastroenterology nursing : the official journal of the Society of Gastroenterology Nurses and Associates. 2019;(2):165-168
Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine prognostic factors in pediatric patients with short bowel syndrome and very short bowel syndrome (defined as less than 25 cm of the bowel with or without colon). This was a retrospective, single-center, observational study that included patients with intestinal failure. Thirty-eight children with short bowel syndrome were included in the study (mean age at diagnosis = 8.4 [range = 0-48] months; female/male = 20/18); 12 children (31.6%) had very short bowel syndrome. Weaning from parenteral nutrition was achieved in 29 (74.5%) of children with short bowel syndrome but only in 4 (33%) in the very short bowel syndrome group. Positive prognostic factors associated with successful weaning from parenteral nutrition were an absolute higher length of the residual intestine, a remnant of at least some part of the colon, and treatment in an experienced center from the diagnosis. Patients with short bowel syndrome and very short bowel syndrome should be treated in a center experienced in intestinal rehabilitation.