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At least one fifth of patients in European hospitals are malnourished. Malnutrition is associated with negative consequences, including higher rates of complications, longer hospital stay, impaired wound healing and increased mortality with consequent effects on costs of healthcare. Evidence suggests that there may be benefits to some malnourished patients from receiving oral nutrition supplements in the short-term but it is not known whether these benefits can be sustained and indeed whether similar benefits may be achieved using food-based interventions of lower cost. The overall objective of the study is to compare two nutritional interventions among malnourished patients with COPD (n=200); oral nutrition supplement (ONS) vs. energy and protein dense in-between meals snack during hospitalisation and at home. Subjects will be followed for one year. The primary endpoint is weight change. Secondary endpoints include forced expiratory volume in one second, forced vital capacity, six-minute walk distance, hand-grip strength, health related quality of life, length of hospital stay, energy- and protein intake, readmissions to the hospital and acute exacerbation. No studies are available comparing the supply of ONS to malnourished patients with COPD compared with the provision of regular food (in-between meals snacks). The results of the study will provide important information that might improve nutrition care in the hospital setting as well as after discharge from the hospital
Full description
Patients with established COPD admitted to the Department of Pulmonary Medicine at Landspitali National University Hospital from September 2014-September 2016 will be screened for malnutrition using the NRS2002 screening tool, recommended by ESPEN. Those identified at risk of malnutrition and are able to give informed consent will be recruited. According to the Hospital statistics and previous studies on the frequency of malnutrition in this patient group, the time frame for recruitment is long enough to recruit 200 subjects who will be randomised into the two study groups (~ 3 subjects per week).
The following baseline data will be collected in order to identify possible confounders. This will include; socio-demographic data (age, gender, civil status, household size, family and social network); major medical diagnosis; use of medication; GOLD score (Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease), depressive symptoms, cognition), additional discharge interventions (e.g. outgoing hospital teams, day care with exercise); and use of oral nutritional supplements.
Inclusion criteria are:
Exclusion criteria are:
Outcome measures:
The primary endpoint is weight changes up to one year from admission to the hospital. Secondary endpoints include forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1), forced vital capacity (FVC), six-minute walk distance, hand-grip strength, health related quality of life (HRQoL), length of hospital stay, nutritional status, energy- and protein intake, readmissions to the hospital in within 30 days, as well as the total number of readmissions to the hospital and acute exacerbation during follow-up. Functional outcome measurements will be conducted by trained research assistant in collaboration with the PhD student. Information about background diets, HRQoL as well as compliance to the intervention diets will be gathered by the PhD and MS students.
Measurements will be conducted at admission to the hospital (baseline measurements) and before discharge from the hospital. Clinical examinations at Landspitali National University Hospital are planned 3, 6 and 12 months after discharge from the hospital. All together we aim at having five measurement points for each subject. Each examination will take ~ 80 minutes (30 min for the FEV1 and FVC tests, 20 min for the walking test and measurement of hand-grip strength, and 30 min for the 24-hour recalls and HRQoL questionnaires). Additionally, the subjects will be contacted on at least two other occasions by phone, in weeks 2 and 6 (each interview ~20 min).
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Exclusion during follow-up: Subjects who withdraw their consent to participate.
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34 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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