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

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Date

2021-11-08

Authors

Servia-Goixart, Lluis
Lopez-Delgado, Juan C
Grau-Carmona, Teodoro
Trujillano-Cabello, Javier
Bordeje-Laguna, M Luisa
Mor-Marco, Esther
Portugal-Rodriguez, Esther
Lorencio-Cardenas, Carol
Montejo-Gonzalez, Juan C
Vera-Artazcoz, Paula

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Elsevier
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Abstract

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. 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. 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  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.

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MeSH Terms

Adult
Critical Care
Enteral Nutrition
Humans
Intensive Care Units
Nutritional Status
Parenteral Nutrition

DeCS Terms

Mortalidad
Nutrición parenteral
Estudio observacional
Gravedad del paciente
Estado nutricional

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Keywords

Enteral nutrition, Intensive care unit, Mortality, Nutritional therapy, Parenteral nutrition

Citation

Servia-Goixart L, Lopez-Delgado JC, Grau-Carmona T, Trujillano-Cabello J, Bordeje-Laguna ML, Mor-Marco E, et al. Evaluation of Nutritional Practices in the Critical Care patient (The ENPIC study): Does nutrition really affect ICU mortality? Clin Nutr ESPEN. 2022 Feb;47:325-332