Evaluation of Nutritional Practices in the Critical Care patient (The ENPIC study): Does nutrition really affect ICU mortality?

Other authors

[Servia-Goixart L, Trujillano-Cabello J] Hospital Universitari Arnau de Vilanova, Intensive Care Department, Lleida, Spain. IRBLLeida (Institut de Recerca Biomedica de Lleida Fundacio Dr. Pifarré; Lleida Biomedical Research Institute's Dr. Pifarré Foundation, Lleida, Spain. [Lopez-Delgado JC] Hospital Universitari de Bellvitge, Intensive Care Department, Hospitalet de Llobregat, Spain. IDIBELL (Institut d’Investigacio Biomédica Bellvitge; Biomedical Investigation Institute of Bellvitge, Hospitalet de Llobregat, Spain. [Grau-Carmona T] Hospital Universitario 12 de Octubre, Intensive Care Department, Madrid, Spain. i+12 (Instituto de Investigacion Sanitaria Hospital 12 de Octubre; Research Institute Hospital 12 de Octubre), Madrid, Spain. [Bordeje-Laguna ML, Mor-Marco E] Hospital Universitario Germans Trias i Pujol, Intensive Care Department, Badalona, Spain. [Iglesias-Rodriguez R] Hospital General de Granollers, Intensive Care Department, Granollers, Spain

Hospital General de Granollers

Publication date

2022-03-22T13:12:49Z

2022-03-22T13:12:49Z

2022-02-01



Abstract

Enteral nutrition; Intensive care unit; Mortality


Nutrició enteral; Unitat de Cures Intensives; Mortalitat


Nutrición enteral; Unidad de Cuidados Intensivos; Mortalidad


Background & aims: The importance of artificial nutritional therapy is underrecognized, typically being considered an adjunctive rather than a primary therapy. We aimed to evaluate the influence of nutritional therapy on mortality in critically ill patients. Methods: This multicenter prospective observational study included adult patients needing artificial nutritional therapy for >48 h if they stayed in one of 38 participating intensive care units for ≥72 h between April and July 2018. Demographic data, comorbidities, diagnoses, nutritional status and therapy (type and details for ≤14 days), and outcomes were registered in a database. Confounders such as disease severity, patient type (e.g., medical, surgical or trauma), and type and duration of nutritional therapy were also included in a multivariate analysis, and hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (95%CIs) were reported. Results: We included 639 patients among whom 448 (70.1%) and 191 (29.9%) received enteral and parenteral nutrition, respectively. Mortality was 25.6%, with non-survivors having the following characteristics: older age; more comorbidities; higher Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) scores (6.6 ± 3.3 vs 8.4 ± 3.7; P < 0.001); greater nutritional risk (Nutrition Risk in the Critically Ill [NUTRIC] score: 3.8 ± 2.1 vs 5.2 ± 1.7; P < 0.001); more vasopressor requirements (70.4% vs 83.5%; P=0.001); and more renal replacement therapy (12.2% vs 23.2%; P=0.001). Multivariate analysis showed that older age (HR: 1.023; 95% CI: 1.008-1.038; P=0.003), higher SOFA score (HR: 1.096; 95% CI: 1.036-1.160; P=0.001), higher NUTRIC score (HR: 1.136; 95% CI: 1.025-1.259; P=0.015), requiring parenteral nutrition after starting enteral nutrition (HR: 2.368; 95% CI: 1.168-4.798; P=0.017), and a higher mean Kcal/Kg/day intake (HR: 1.057; 95% CI: 1.015-1.101; P=0.008) were associated with mortality. By contrast, a higher mean protein intake protected against mortality (HR: 0.507; 95% CI: 0.263-0.977; P=0.042). Conclusions: Old age, higher organ failure scores, and greater nutritional risk appear to be associated with higher mortality. Patients who need parenteral nutrition after starting enteral nutrition may represent a high-risk subgroup for mortality due to illness severity and problems receiving appropriate nutritional therapy. Mean calorie and protein delivery also appeared to influence outcomes.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Elsevier

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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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