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Adequacy of enteral nutritional support in intensive care units does not affect the short- and long-term prognosis of mechanically ventilated patients: a pilot study

ABSTRACT

Objective:

To correlate short-term (duration of mechanical ventilation and length of intensive care unit stay) and long-term (functional capacity) clinical outcomes of patients who reached nutritional adequacy ≥ 70% of predicted in the first 72 hours of hospitalization in the intensive care unit.

Methods:

This was a prospective observational pilot study conducted in an 18-bed intensive care unit. A total of 100 mechanically ventilated patients receiving exclusive enteral nutritional support and receiving intensive care for more than 72 hours were included. Patients who never received enteral nutrition, those with spinal cord trauma, pregnant women, organ donors and cases of family refusal were excluded. The variables studied were nutritional adequacy ≥ 70% of predicted in the first 72 hours of hospitalization, length of intensive care unit stay, duration of mechanical ventilation and the ability to perform activities of daily living after 12 months, assessed via telephone contact using the Lawton Activities of Daily Living Scale.

Results:

The mean duration of mechanical ventilation was 18 ± 9 days, and the mean intensive care unit length of stay was 19 ± 8 days. Only 45% of the patients received more than 70% of the target nutrition in 72 hours. There was no association between nutritional adequacy and short-term (duration of mechanical ventilation, length of stay in the intensive care unit and mortality) or long-term (functional capacity and mortality) clinical outcomes.

Conclusion:

Critically ill patients receiving caloric intake ≥ 70% in the first 72 hours of hospitalization did not present better outcomes in the short term or after 1 year.

Keywords:
Critical illness; Critical care; Nutritional support; Enteral nutrition; Energy requirement; Activities of daily living; Respiration, artificial; Intensive care units

RESUMO

Objetivo:

Correlacionar os desfechos clínicos, em curto (tempo em ventilação mecânica e tempo de unidade de terapia intensiva) e longo prazos (capacidade funcional), dos pacientes que atingiram adequação nutricional ≥ 70% do previsto nas primeiras 72 horas de internação na unidade de terapia intensiva.

Métodos:

Estudo piloto prospectivo observacional, realizado em unidade de terapia intensiva de 18 leitos. Foram incluídos cem pacientes mecanicamente ventilados, recebendo suporte nutricional enteral exclusivo e submetidos à terapia intensiva por mais de 72 horas. Foram excluídos pacientes que nunca receberam nutrição enteral, gestantes, com trauma raquimedular, doadores de órgãos e casos de recusa familiar. As variáveis estudadas foram adequação nutricional ≥ 70% do previsto nas primeiras 72 horas de internação, tempo de unidade de terapia intensiva, tempo em ventilação mecânica e, após 12 meses, via contato telefônico, a capacidade de realizar Atividades da Vida Diária por meio do instrumento Lawton-Atividades de Vida Diária.

Resultados:

O tempo médio em ventilação mecânica foi de 18 ± 9 dias, e de internação na unidade de terapia intensiva de 19 ± 8 dias. Somente 45% dos pacientes receberem mais de 70% do alvo nutricional em 72 horas. Não houve associação entre a adequação nutricional e os desfechos em curto prazo (tempo de permanência em ventilação mecânica, tempo de internação na unidade de terapia intensiva e mortalidade), nem com os desfechos clínicos em longo prazo (capacidade funcional e mortalidade).

Conclusão:

Pacientes criticamente enfermos que recebem aporte calórico ≥ 70%, nas primeiras 72 horas de internação não apresentaram melhores desfechos em curto prazo ou após 1 ano.

Descritores:
Estado terminal; Cuidados críticos; Apoio nutricional; Nutrição enteral; Necessidade energética; Atividades cotidianas; Respiração artificial; Unidades de terapia intensiva

INTRODUCTION

The discrepancy between nutrient prescription and delivery in the acute phase of critical illness is common, which often makes nutritional support suboptimal.(11 Singh N, Gupta D, Aggarwal AN, Agarwal R, Jindal SK. An assessment of nutritional support to critically ill patients and its correlation with outcomes in a respiratory intensive care unit. Respir Care. 2009;54(12):1688-96.,22 Couto CL, Moreira JS, Hoher JA. Terapia nutricional enteral em politraumatizados sob ventilação mecânica e oferta energética. Rev Nutr. 2012;25(6):695-705.) Previous research relates low calorie delivery to worse outcomes.(11 Singh N, Gupta D, Aggarwal AN, Agarwal R, Jindal SK. An assessment of nutritional support to critically ill patients and its correlation with outcomes in a respiratory intensive care unit. Respir Care. 2009;54(12):1688-96.

2 Couto CL, Moreira JS, Hoher JA. Terapia nutricional enteral em politraumatizados sob ventilação mecânica e oferta energética. Rev Nutr. 2012;25(6):695-705.

3 Tsai JR, Chang WT, Sheu CC, Wu YJ, Sheu YH, Liu PL, et al. Inadequate energy delivery during early critical illness correlates with increased risk of mortality in patients who survive at least seven days: a retrospective study. Clin Nutr. 2011;30(2):209-14.
-44 Alberda C, Gramlich L, Jones N, Jeejeebhoy K, Day AG, Dhaliwal R, et al. The relationship between nutritional intake and clinical outcomes in critically ill patients: results of an international multicenter observational study. Intensive Care Med. 2009;35(10):1728-37.) Recent studies have shown that permissive underfeeding, for up to 1 week, may be associated with better outcomes.(55 Arabi YM, Tamim HM, Dhar GS, Al Dawood A, Al-Sultan M, Sakkijha MH, et al. Permissive underfeeding and intensive insulin therapy in critically ill patients: a randomized controlled trial. Am J Clin Nutr. 2011;93(3):569-77.,66 Casaer MP, Wilmer A, Hermans G, Wouters PJ, Mesotten D, Van den Berghe G. Role of disease and macronutrient dose in the randomized controlled EPaNIC trial: a post hoc analysis. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2013;187(3):247-55.)

Researchers argue that the apparent benefit of underfeeding may be a misconception resulting from the lack of description of medium- and long-term outcomes. An observational study on the impact of long-term underfeeding has challenged its apparent benefit.(77 Wei X, Day AG, Ouellette-Kuntz H, Heyland DK. The association between nutritional adequacy and long-term outcomes in critically ill patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation: a multicenter cohort study. Crit Care Med. 2015;43(8):1569-79.) Nevertheless, another clinical study has shown that underfeeding is associated with lower long-term mortality,(55 Arabi YM, Tamim HM, Dhar GS, Al Dawood A, Al-Sultan M, Sakkijha MH, et al. Permissive underfeeding and intensive insulin therapy in critically ill patients: a randomized controlled trial. Am J Clin Nutr. 2011;93(3):569-77.) and a third study showed no difference in mortality or quality of life.(88 Needham DM, Dinglas VD, Bienvenu OJ, Colantuoni E, Wozniak AW, Rice TW, Hopkins RO; NIH NHLBI ARDS Network. One year outcomes in patients with acute lung injury randomised to initial trophic or full enteral feeding: prospective follow-up of EDEN randomised trial. BMJ. 2013;346:f1532.) However, the lack of generalization, the inclusion of patients at low nutritional risk and the methodological issues of these studies are factors that make the interpretation and applicability of these data difficult.(99 Weijs PJ, Wischmeyer PE. Optimizing energy and protein balance in the ICU. Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care. 2013;16(2):194-201.,1010 Heyland DK, Wischmeyer PE. Does artificial nutrition improve outcome of critical illness? An alternative viewpoint! Crit Care. 2013;17(4):324.) It is important to assess how interventions in the intensive care unit (ICU), including nutritional support recommendations, affect critically ill patients in the long term.(1111 Krishnan JA, Parce PB, Martinez A, Diette GB, Brower RG. Caloric intake in medical ICU patients: consistency of care with guidelines and relationship to clinical outcomes. Chest. 2003;124(1):297-305.,1212 Arabi YM, Haddad SH, Tamim HM, Rishu AH, Sakkijha MH, Kahoul SH, et al. Near-target caloric intake in critically ill medical-surgical patients is associated with adverse outcomes. JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr. 2010;34(3):280-8.)

The quality of life can be affected by the muscle weakness of critically ill patients, as it compromises functional capacity in the medium- and long-term.(1313 Kramer CL. Intensive Care unit-acquired weakness. Neurol Clin. 2017;35(4):723-36.) Recent studies have shown that muscle weakness may be associated with increasing doses of nutrition in the acute phase of critical illness.(1414 Casaer MP, Mesotten D, Hermans G, Wouters PJ, Schetz M, Meyfroidt G, et al. Early versus late parenteral nutrition in critically ill adults. N Engl J Med. 2011;365(6):506-17.,1515 Fivez T, Kerklaan D, Mesotten D, Verbruggen S, Wouters PJ, Vanhorebeek I, et al. Early versus late parenteral nutrition in critically ill children. N Engl J Med. 2016;374(12):1111-22.) The most plausible explanation for the negative impact of early and full feeding is feeding‐induced suppression of autophagy.(1616 Van Dyck L, Casaer MP, Gunst J. Autophagy and its implications against early full nutrition support in critical illness. Nutr Clin Pract. 2018;33(3):339-47.)

The primary objective of this pilot study was to test the hypothesis that nutritional adequacy ≥ 70% of predicted in the first 72 hours of ICU stay in mechanically ventilated patients is associated with short-term clinical outcomes (duration of mechanical ventilation (MV) and length of stay in the ICU). The secondary objectives were to assess ICU mortality and the ability to perform Activities of Daily Living (ADL) 12 months after ICU discharge.

METHODS

This was a prospective, observational pilot study conducted at an 18-bed medical-surgical ICU at Complexo Hospitalar Santa Casa de Porto Alegre and registered with the Ethics Committee (CAAE 14709313.0.0000.5335). Patients undergoing invasive MV and exclusive enteral nutritional support were included if the length of hospital stay was greater than 72 hours. Patients who had never received enteral nutrition, patients with spinal cord trauma, pregnant women and organ donors were excluded. The relatives of all participants signed an informed consent form.

Data related to nutritional support were collected, such as the start of enteral nutrition, time to reach 70% caloric adequacy and total calorie and protein requirements.(55 Arabi YM, Tamim HM, Dhar GS, Al Dawood A, Al-Sultan M, Sakkijha MH, et al. Permissive underfeeding and intensive insulin therapy in critically ill patients: a randomized controlled trial. Am J Clin Nutr. 2011;93(3):569-77.) Nutritional requirements were calculated according to the unit's protocol, which uses 20-30 kcal per kg of body weight per day. The current weight is used when it is possible to obtain this information from a relative or from a previous hospitalization; otherwise, the weight is estimated using the Chumlea formula.(1717 Chumlea WC, Roche AF, Steinbaugh ML. Estimating stature from knee height for persons 60 to 90 years of age. J Am Geriatr Soc. 1985;33(2):116-20.)

Regarding the clinical outcomes, data on MV duration, ICU length of stay and ICU mortality were collected. Patients were followed up for 28 days or until hospital discharge (whichever occurred first). After 12 months, telephone contact was made with the responsible family member, and the Lawton Activities of Daily Living Scale was applied to evaluate the individual's functional capacity.(1818 Lawton MP, Brody EM. Assessment of older people: self-maintaining and instrumental activities of daily living. Gerontologist. 1969;9(3):179-86.) Demographic data and the reason for admission were recorded, and the Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE II) score and the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score were assessed as disease severity scores.(1919 Knaus WA, Draper EA, Wagner DP, Zimmerman JE. APACHE II: a severity of disease classification system. Crit Care Med. 1985;13(10):818-29.,2020 Vincent JL, de Mendonca A, Cantraine F, Moreno R, Takala J, Suter PM, et al. Use of the SOFA score to assess the incidence of organ dysfunction/failure in intensive care units: results of a multicenter, prospective study. Working group on "sepsis-related problems" of the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine. Crit Care Med. 1998;26(11):1793-800.)

Statistical analysis

Quantitative variables are described as the mean and standard deviation or as the median and interquartile range. Qualitative variables are described as absolute and relative frequencies. Student's t test and one-way ANOVA were applied to compare means. In case of asymmetry, the Mann-Whitney and Kruskal-Wallis tests were used. For comparison of proportions, the chi-squared test, Pearson's correlation or Fisher's exact test was applied. To complement these analyses, the adjusted residuals test was used. The associations between continuous variables were evaluated by the Pearson (r) or Spearman (rs) correlation coefficients.

The sample size was calculated based on the study of Castro et al.,(2121 Castro MG, Pompilio CE, Horie LM, Verotti CC, Waitzberg DL. Education program on medical nutrition and length of stay of critically ill patients. Clin Nutr. 2013;32(6):1061-6.) which showed a reduction of 9 days in ICU stay relative to the calories prescribed in the first 72 hours of hospitalization. For our study, a minimum of 60 patients to be included was estimated, considering a normal distribution for ICU length of stay, with a significance level of 5% and a power of 90%. Thus, a minimum of 60 patients to be included was defined.

The significance level adopted was 5% (p ≤ 0.05), and the analyses were performed in the Statistical Package for Social Science (SPSS), version 21.0 (IBM Corp., Armonk, New York, USA).

RESULTS

The demographic and clinical characteristics are described in table 1.

Table 1
Sample characteristics

A total of 100 patients were included during the study period. Most patients (55%) did not reach 70% nutritional adequacy. There were 79 intrahospital deaths, plus an additional 4 during the 12-month follow-up. Four patients were lost to follow-up due to the impossibility of contacting family members via telephone. Therefore, 13 patients were evaluated after 12 months of follow-up (Figure 1). There was no association between nutritional adequacy in the first 72 hours and short- or long-term clinical outcomes (Table 2).

Figure 1
Data collection flowchart.

MV - mechanical ventilation; ENT - enteral nutrition therapy; ICU - intensive care unit; ADL - Activities of Daily Living.


Table 2
Association between nutritional adequacy and short- and long-term outcomes

DISCUSSION

The main finding of this pilot study was that nutritional adequacy (caloric target > 70%) in the first 72 hours of ICU stay is not associated with improvement of short-term outcomes (duration of MV, length of ICU stay and mortality). In addition, the ability to perform ADL 1 year after discharge from the ICU does not appear to have been influenced by nutritional adequacy.

Studies have suggested an association between a negative energy balance and worse clinical outcomes (duration of MV, length of stay in the ICU and hospital) and ICU mortality, suggesting that adequate caloric intake could be associated with better clinical outcomes.(22 Couto CL, Moreira JS, Hoher JA. Terapia nutricional enteral em politraumatizados sob ventilação mecânica e oferta energética. Rev Nutr. 2012;25(6):695-705.,2222 Faisy C, Lerolle N, Dachraoui F, Savard JF, Abboud I, Tadie JM, et al. Impact of energy deficit calculated by a predictive method on outcome in medical patients requiring prolonged acute mechanical ventilation. Br J Nutr. 2009;101(7):1079-87.

23 Kan MN, Chang HH, Sheu WF, Cheng CH, Lee BJ, Huang YC. Estimation of energy requirements for mechanically ventilated, critically ill patients using nutritional status. Crit Care. 2003;7(5):R108-15.

24 Rubinson L, Diette GB, Song X, Brower RG, Krishnan JA. Low caloric intake is associated with nosocomial bloodstream infections in patients in the medical intensive care unit. Crit Care Med. 2004;32(2):350-7.
-2525 Villet S, Chiolero RL, Bollmann MD, Revelly JP, Cayeux R N MC, Delarue J, et al. Negative impact of hypocaloric feeding and energy balance on clinical outcome in ICU patients. Clin Nutr. 2005;24(4):502-9.) This topic has been extensively debated; however, recent meta-analyses do not support this hypothesis(2626 Tian F, Wang X, Gao X, Wan X, Wu C, Zhang L, et al. Effect of initial calorie intake via enteral nutrition in critical illness: a meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. Crit Care. 2015;19:180.,2727 Parikh HG, Miller A, Chapman M, Moran JL, Peake SL. Calorie delivery and clinical outcomes in the critically ill: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Crit Care Resusc. 2016;18(1):17-24.) and do not show a reduction in the length of ICU stay, length of hospital stay, duration of MV, or mortality rate. Our results were similar to those found in the EDEN study,(2828 National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) Clinical Trials Network, Rice TW, Wheeler AP, Thompson BT, Steingrub J, Hite RD, Moss M, et al. Initial trophic vs full enteral feeding in patients with acute lung injury: the EDEN randomized trial. JAMA. 2012;307(8):795-803.) which found no difference in the clinical outcomes of mechanically ventilated patients who were provided reduced caloric supply in the first 6 days of ICU stay. The sample size for the present study was based on the study of Castro et al.,(2121 Castro MG, Pompilio CE, Horie LM, Verotti CC, Waitzberg DL. Education program on medical nutrition and length of stay of critically ill patients. Clin Nutr. 2013;32(6):1061-6.) who found a 9-day reduction in ICU length of stay. We speculate that the effect size in that study indicates that there was a difference in severity that was not revealed by the evaluation used and that acceptance of feeding was therefore more effective and associated with a better prognosis.

Few studies have evaluated the consequences of nutritional adequacy in the acute phase of critical illness on long-term outcomes.(1111 Krishnan JA, Parce PB, Martinez A, Diette GB, Brower RG. Caloric intake in medical ICU patients: consistency of care with guidelines and relationship to clinical outcomes. Chest. 2003;124(1):297-305.) Wei et al.(77 Wei X, Day AG, Ouellette-Kuntz H, Heyland DK. The association between nutritional adequacy and long-term outcomes in critically ill patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation: a multicenter cohort study. Crit Care Med. 2015;43(8):1569-79.) evaluated the relationship between nutritional adequacy and short- and long-term clinical outcomes, including 6-month survival and quality of life in critically ill patients requiring prolonged MV. The authors suggest an important relationship between full nutritional support in the first week of hospitalization and higher survival at 6 months of follow-up. Our study does not replicate these findings, since 6 of the 13 patients who completed the functional capacity assessment at 12 months and who did not reach the caloric target were no longer dependent.

Our study has several limitations, such as its observational nature, small number of patients studied by convenience (not all admitted patients were screened) to evaluate long-term outcomes, no collection of data on nutrient prescription and delivery, lack of comparison of functional capacity before and after ICU admission and the lack of evaluation of patient nutritional status or other nutritional risk scores. The questionnaire was applied only at 12 months after discharge from the unit, and there were inevitable patient losses due to changed telephone numbers. A very severely ill population was selected, and all patients were mechanically ventilated, had high mean APACHE II scores and had almost 7 organ dysfunctions on average. The high mortality limits the interpretation of the short-term outcomes but mainly affects the long-term outcomes due to the small number of analyzed patients.

CONCLUSION

The results of this pilot study show that critically ill patients receiving a caloric intake ≥ 70% in the first 72 hours of hospitalization do not present better short-term outcomes. Secondarily, nutritional adequacy does not appear to have positively influenced long-term functional capacity.

REFERÊNCIAS

  • 1
    Singh N, Gupta D, Aggarwal AN, Agarwal R, Jindal SK. An assessment of nutritional support to critically ill patients and its correlation with outcomes in a respiratory intensive care unit. Respir Care. 2009;54(12):1688-96.
  • 2
    Couto CL, Moreira JS, Hoher JA. Terapia nutricional enteral em politraumatizados sob ventilação mecânica e oferta energética. Rev Nutr. 2012;25(6):695-705.
  • 3
    Tsai JR, Chang WT, Sheu CC, Wu YJ, Sheu YH, Liu PL, et al. Inadequate energy delivery during early critical illness correlates with increased risk of mortality in patients who survive at least seven days: a retrospective study. Clin Nutr. 2011;30(2):209-14.
  • 4
    Alberda C, Gramlich L, Jones N, Jeejeebhoy K, Day AG, Dhaliwal R, et al. The relationship between nutritional intake and clinical outcomes in critically ill patients: results of an international multicenter observational study. Intensive Care Med. 2009;35(10):1728-37.
  • 5
    Arabi YM, Tamim HM, Dhar GS, Al Dawood A, Al-Sultan M, Sakkijha MH, et al. Permissive underfeeding and intensive insulin therapy in critically ill patients: a randomized controlled trial. Am J Clin Nutr. 2011;93(3):569-77.
  • 6
    Casaer MP, Wilmer A, Hermans G, Wouters PJ, Mesotten D, Van den Berghe G. Role of disease and macronutrient dose in the randomized controlled EPaNIC trial: a post hoc analysis. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2013;187(3):247-55.
  • 7
    Wei X, Day AG, Ouellette-Kuntz H, Heyland DK. The association between nutritional adequacy and long-term outcomes in critically ill patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation: a multicenter cohort study. Crit Care Med. 2015;43(8):1569-79.
  • 8
    Needham DM, Dinglas VD, Bienvenu OJ, Colantuoni E, Wozniak AW, Rice TW, Hopkins RO; NIH NHLBI ARDS Network. One year outcomes in patients with acute lung injury randomised to initial trophic or full enteral feeding: prospective follow-up of EDEN randomised trial. BMJ. 2013;346:f1532.
  • 9
    Weijs PJ, Wischmeyer PE. Optimizing energy and protein balance in the ICU. Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care. 2013;16(2):194-201.
  • 10
    Heyland DK, Wischmeyer PE. Does artificial nutrition improve outcome of critical illness? An alternative viewpoint! Crit Care. 2013;17(4):324.
  • 11
    Krishnan JA, Parce PB, Martinez A, Diette GB, Brower RG. Caloric intake in medical ICU patients: consistency of care with guidelines and relationship to clinical outcomes. Chest. 2003;124(1):297-305.
  • 12
    Arabi YM, Haddad SH, Tamim HM, Rishu AH, Sakkijha MH, Kahoul SH, et al. Near-target caloric intake in critically ill medical-surgical patients is associated with adverse outcomes. JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr. 2010;34(3):280-8.
  • 13
    Kramer CL. Intensive Care unit-acquired weakness. Neurol Clin. 2017;35(4):723-36.
  • 14
    Casaer MP, Mesotten D, Hermans G, Wouters PJ, Schetz M, Meyfroidt G, et al. Early versus late parenteral nutrition in critically ill adults. N Engl J Med. 2011;365(6):506-17.
  • 15
    Fivez T, Kerklaan D, Mesotten D, Verbruggen S, Wouters PJ, Vanhorebeek I, et al. Early versus late parenteral nutrition in critically ill children. N Engl J Med. 2016;374(12):1111-22.
  • 16
    Van Dyck L, Casaer MP, Gunst J. Autophagy and its implications against early full nutrition support in critical illness. Nutr Clin Pract. 2018;33(3):339-47.
  • 17
    Chumlea WC, Roche AF, Steinbaugh ML. Estimating stature from knee height for persons 60 to 90 years of age. J Am Geriatr Soc. 1985;33(2):116-20.
  • 18
    Lawton MP, Brody EM. Assessment of older people: self-maintaining and instrumental activities of daily living. Gerontologist. 1969;9(3):179-86.
  • 19
    Knaus WA, Draper EA, Wagner DP, Zimmerman JE. APACHE II: a severity of disease classification system. Crit Care Med. 1985;13(10):818-29.
  • 20
    Vincent JL, de Mendonca A, Cantraine F, Moreno R, Takala J, Suter PM, et al. Use of the SOFA score to assess the incidence of organ dysfunction/failure in intensive care units: results of a multicenter, prospective study. Working group on "sepsis-related problems" of the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine. Crit Care Med. 1998;26(11):1793-800.
  • 21
    Castro MG, Pompilio CE, Horie LM, Verotti CC, Waitzberg DL. Education program on medical nutrition and length of stay of critically ill patients. Clin Nutr. 2013;32(6):1061-6.
  • 22
    Faisy C, Lerolle N, Dachraoui F, Savard JF, Abboud I, Tadie JM, et al. Impact of energy deficit calculated by a predictive method on outcome in medical patients requiring prolonged acute mechanical ventilation. Br J Nutr. 2009;101(7):1079-87.
  • 23
    Kan MN, Chang HH, Sheu WF, Cheng CH, Lee BJ, Huang YC. Estimation of energy requirements for mechanically ventilated, critically ill patients using nutritional status. Crit Care. 2003;7(5):R108-15.
  • 24
    Rubinson L, Diette GB, Song X, Brower RG, Krishnan JA. Low caloric intake is associated with nosocomial bloodstream infections in patients in the medical intensive care unit. Crit Care Med. 2004;32(2):350-7.
  • 25
    Villet S, Chiolero RL, Bollmann MD, Revelly JP, Cayeux R N MC, Delarue J, et al. Negative impact of hypocaloric feeding and energy balance on clinical outcome in ICU patients. Clin Nutr. 2005;24(4):502-9.
  • 26
    Tian F, Wang X, Gao X, Wan X, Wu C, Zhang L, et al. Effect of initial calorie intake via enteral nutrition in critical illness: a meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. Crit Care. 2015;19:180.
  • 27
    Parikh HG, Miller A, Chapman M, Moran JL, Peake SL. Calorie delivery and clinical outcomes in the critically ill: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Crit Care Resusc. 2016;18(1):17-24.
  • 28
    National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) Clinical Trials Network, Rice TW, Wheeler AP, Thompson BT, Steingrub J, Hite RD, Moss M, et al. Initial trophic vs full enteral feeding in patients with acute lung injury: the EDEN randomized trial. JAMA. 2012;307(8):795-803.

Edited by

Responsible editor: Jorge Ibrain Figueira Salluh

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    14 Mar 2019
  • Date of issue
    2019

History

  • Received
    31 Aug 2018
  • Accepted
    27 Nov 2018
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