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The primary objective is to quantify the caloric and protein intake in adult participants with acute respiratory failure who start a noninvasive ventilation treatment. The main question is:
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Background:
Nutrition is a fundamental component of Intensive Care Unit (ICU) therapy. Critically ill patients have an increased risk of developing malnutrition early from the ICU admission, a factor strongly associated with higher risks of complications, prolonged ICU/hospital stays, and increased ICU readmission and mortality rates. Malnutrition in critical patients occurs due to underlying acute disease, leading to elevated catabolic stress. The use of noninvasive ventilation (NIV) has significantly increased over the past twenty years, becoming a cornerstone of acute respiratory failure (ARF) treatment. Respiratory support is provided through an interface, usually a mask or a helmet, which often poses a significant obstacle to nutrition delivery, making oral intake impossible and necessitating the initiation of enteral (EN) or parenteral nutrition (PN). These methods can both increase patient discomfort due to nasogastric (NG) tube and central line positioning and management. While critical care guidelines for nutritional management of mechanically ventilated patients are well established, data and recommendations for patients on NIV are still limited. A retrospective study conducted by our team in the intensive care unit (data not yet published) revealed a malnutrition prevalence of 70% among patients undergoing NIV on the fifth day of hospitalization.
Objectives of the Study:
The primary objective of this study is to quantify the caloric and protein intake of patients undergoing noninvasive ventilation (NIV) in intensive care units, sub-intensive care units, and hospital wards. Secondary objectives are to assess the potential association between clinical characteristics, nutritional therapy features, and the failure to achieve caloric and protein intake targets, to evaluate complications associated with NIV to analyze differences between the actual caloric and protein intake and the recommended targets based on the type of respiratory failure (hypoxemic vs. hypoxemic-hypercapnic) for which NIV treatment is initiated.
Methods:
A monocentric prospective observational study to be conducted in the general intensive care unit (ICU), intermediate care unit of Emergency Medicine and Surgery (MECAU), Cardiology Intermediate Care Unit, cardiology and internal medicine wards of the University Hospital Maggiore della Carità in Novara.
The study will include adult patients admitted to the specified units who undergo NIV treatment for acute respiratory failure caused by various conditions (e.g., cardiogenic pulmonary edema, pneumonia, exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease). All patients admitted to the hospital requiring the initiation of noninvasive ventilation (NIV) for acute respiratory failure within 24 hours of admission will be evaluated for inclusion in the study.
For all patients meeting the prespecified inclusion criteria and without exclusion criteria, the following data will be collected:
Sample Size: a retrospective study conducted by our team in the intensive care unit (data not yet published) revealed a malnutrition prevalence of 70% among patients undergoing NIV on the fifth day of hospitalization. With a confidence level of 95%, a sample size of 126 subjects is required to estimate a malnutrition prevalence of 70% on the fifth day of NIV initiation with a precision of ±8%.
Statistical Analysis: descriptive statistics will be used to summarize the characteristics of the included patients, categorical variables will be presented as numbers and percentages, while continuous variables will be expressed as means (± standard deviation, SD) or medians [interquartile range, IQR]. T-test or Mann-Whitney U test will be applied for differences between means or medians of continuous variables, respectively, while Chi-square or Fisher's exact test will be used for categorical variables. For comparisons involving more than two groups analysis of variance (ANOVA) or Kruskal-Wallis test will be employed for continuous variables and Chi-square test will be used for categorical variables with multiple comparisons. A multivariable regression model will be applied to examine associations between clinical outcomes (dependent variables) and patient clinical characteristics or nutritional therapy features (independent variables). A p-value of <0.05 will be considered statistically significant for all analyses.
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126 participants in 1 patient group
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Francesca Moretto, Medical Doctor
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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