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BACKGROUND: Nutrition plays a significant role in ICU treatment, and may influence mortality and length of stay in ICU. Enteral route (EN) is preferential to parenteral route (PN) in provision of daily nutritional requirements. When enteral route is insufficient, supplemental parenteral nutrition (SPN) is recommended. Optimal timing of SPN in acute phase of illness remains elusive. ICU patients suffer significant lean body mass loss, in majority, in the first 7-10 days of stay. Optimal provision of protein may prevent muscle wasting. Lean body mass is essential for optimal physical functioning after treatment. Although ICU mortality has been reduced lately, the number of patients going to rehabilitation after ICU stay has tripled. Patients after oncological surgery of the gastrointestinal tract may be threatened with impairment of physical functioning after ICU treatment.
AIM: To compare the influence of early and late supplemental parenteral nutrition on long-term physical functioning in ICU patients after oncological surgery of the gastrointestinal tract.
STUDY DESIGN: Prospective, randomised, multi-centre assessor-blinded study. METHODS & ANALYSIS: Patients will be randomised into intervention group that would receive SPN on first day, and would be continued until 7th day of stay in ICU. Control group would receive SPN on 7th day of stay in ICU, when it is not then already met via enteral route. Physical Component of SF-36 Scale at 6 month after ICU admission will be assessed.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Contraindication against SPN or inability to receive SPN via central venous access
Received PN within 7 days before randomisation
Expected to receive ≥20% of energy via supplemental enteral nutrition (EN) and/or non-nutritional sources (e.g. glucose solution for drug dilution or lipids from propofol) during the first 3 nutritional treatment days
Inability to initiate EN prior to randomization
Body mass index (BMI) <17 kg/m2 or >35 kg/m2
Any severe, persistent blood coagulation disorder with uncontrolled bleeding
Any congenital errors of amino acid metabolism
Known hypersensitivity to fish, egg, soybean proteins, peanut proteins, or to any of the active substances or excipients contained in SPN.
Known hypersensitivity to milk protein or to any other substance contained in SPN
Acute liver failure with encephalopathy, including intoxication (e.g. paracetamol, death cap, golden chain) and/or liver enzymes (aspartate aminotransferase [AST], alanine aminotransferase [ALT], gamma glutamyl transferase [GGT]) or bilirubin exceeding 10 x ULN
Hemophagocytic syndrome
Known history of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), hepatitis B and/or C
Pregnancy or lactation
Patient unlikely to survive to 6 months due to underlying illness
Receiving end-of-life-care
Laboratory Exclusions:
Hypertriglyceridemia characterised by serum triglyceride levels >4 mmol/L [>350 mg/dL])
Treatment-refractory, clinically significant major abnormality in the serum concentration of any electrolyte (sodium, potassium, magnesium, total calcium, chloride, inorganic phosphate)
Concomitant Therapy Exclusions:
Chronic maintenance therapy with systemic glucocorticoid steroids (Hydrocortisone >0.3 mg/kg/d)
Concomitant administration of chemotherapy
Administration of growth hormone and teduglutide within the previous 4 weeks
Other Exclusions:
Chronic liver failure ( Child -Pugh scale B or C) e.g. secondary to drug or alcohol abuse
Participation in another interventional clinical trial within the previous 4 weeks
Previous inclusion in the present study
Primary purpose
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220 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Paweł Piwowarczyk, MD PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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