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Malnutrition occurs in up to 50% of patients requiring elective surgery for neoplastic diseases. It exerts a detrimental influence on outcome of surgery, because it can suppress immune function, exaggerate stress response and cause organ system dysfunction. Increased susceptibility to infection, protracted wound healing, impaired blood clotting and vessel wall fragility have been shown to be the leading causes of postoperative morbidity and mortality in malnourished patients undergoing major surgical resections.
This trial is designed as a prospective randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled pilot study in a academic single center in Switzerland. A total of 50 malnourished patients with gastro-intestinal tumors will receive orally glutamine or placebo-treatment during a period of 5 days prior to surgery. The investigators hypothesize that oral Glutamine administration is feasible, well tolerated, will decrease postoperative morbidity, will suppress postoperative cell damage and inflammatory response, and will improve the perioperative immunocompetence of the patients.
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Background
Malnutrition occurs in up to 50% of patients requiring elective surgery for neoplastic diseases. It exerts a detrimental influence on outcome of surgery, because it can suppress immune function, exaggerate stress response and cause organ system dysfunction. Increased susceptibility to infection, protracted wound healing, impaired blood clotting and vessel wall fragility have been shown to be the leading causes of postoperative morbidity and mortality in malnourished patients undergoing major surgical resections.
Immuno- or pharmaconutrition, defined as enteral or parenteral nutritional therapy based on a variety of products, such as omega-3-fatty acids, glutamine, arginine, sulfur-containing amino acids, nucleotides and anti-oxidants, is thought to have beneficial effects on postoperative recovery in a wide variety of surgical patients. Studies have shown its clinical effectiveness in terms of reduced postoperative complications, shortening the hospital stay and reduced hospitalization costs. Torosian et al. showed that severely malnourished patients benefit from preoperative nutrition, which reduce postoperative complications by 20%.
Although there is clinical evidence for the administration of immunonutrition to patients in the perioperative period, our understanding of the optimal type and time of immunonutrition, the characteristics of patients that benefit most, as well as the immunological mechanisms responsible for its beneficial effect is limited.
Objective
To assess in malnourished cancer patients the effect of 30g oral glutamine/day (3 sachets KABI® glutamine, Fresenius Kabi/day) for a preoperative course of 5 days on:
Methods
Seven days before surgery, the patients will receive a tetanus booster shot and will be randomly enrolled in either the 'glutamine group' or into the 'placebo group'. The patients as well as the responsible surgeons will be blinded.
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42 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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