On how to feed critically ill children in intensive care: A slowly shifting paradigm

IF 7.4 2区 医学 Q1 NUTRITION & DIETETICS Clinical nutrition Pub Date : 2025-03-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-06 DOI:10.1016/j.clnu.2025.02.003
Jan Gunst , Ilse Vanhorebeek , Sascha CAT. Verbruggen , Karolijn Dulfer , Koen FM. Joosten , Greet Van den Berghe
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Abstract

Critically ill children requiring treatment in a pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) suffer from anorexia and/or feeding intolerance. The resulting macronutrient deficit associates with poor outcome. Until recently, this association formed the basis for initiating enteral or parenteral feeding early to improve outcome. The multicenter “Early-versus-Late-Parenteral-Nutrition-in-the-Pediatric-Intensive-Care-Unit” randomized controlled trial (PEPaNIC-RCT) addressed whether this association is causal. It showed that early supplementation of insufficient/contraindicated enteral nutrition with parenteral nutrition, as compared with accepting a macronutrient deficit throughout the first week in the PICU, did not improve outcome. On the contrary, it caused more infections and prolonged organ support and PICU stay, and adversely affected neurodevelopmental outcomes 2 and 4 years later. Harm was present in all subgroups and appeared explained by the macronutrient dose, more specifically the amino-acid dose, not lipid or glucose doses. These findings corroborated results from large-scale adult RCTs. Mechanisms of harm from early enhanced nutrition comprised suppressed cellular repair pathways like autophagy and ketogenesis, suppressed illness-induced alterations in thyroid hormone metabolism, more iatrogenic hyperglycemia, increased urea cycle activity through anabolic resistance, and induction of epigenetic modifications that mediate longer-term developmental impairments.
These results came unexpected to many pediatric intensivists. Hence, the paradigm has only slowly begun to shift toward more restrictive macronutrient administration in the acute phase of critical illness. Benefits of early fasting responses have become clear, provided micronutrients are given to prevent deficiencies and refeeding syndrome. These insights open perspectives for studies investigating novel nutritional strategies to activate fasting-induced cellular repair while avoiding prolonged starvation.
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关于如何喂养重症监护中的危重儿童:一个缓慢转变的范式
需要在儿科重症监护病房(PICU)治疗的危重儿童患有厌食症和/或喂养不耐受。由此产生的大量营养素缺乏与不良预后有关。直到最近,这种关联形成了早期开始肠内或肠外喂养以改善预后的基础。多中心“儿科重症监护室早期与晚期静脉外营养”随机对照试验(PEPaNIC-RCT)探讨了这种关联是否存在因果关系。研究表明,与PICU第一周接受大量营养素缺乏相比,早期补充不足/禁忌的肠内营养与肠外营养并没有改善结果。相反,它会引起更多的感染,延长器官支持和PICU住院时间,并对2年和4年后的神经发育结果产生不利影响。在所有亚组中都存在危害,似乎可以用常量营养素剂量来解释,更具体地说是氨基酸剂量,而不是脂质或葡萄糖剂量。这些发现证实了大规模成人随机对照试验的结果。早期强化营养的危害机制包括抑制细胞修复途径,如自噬和生酮,抑制疾病引起的甲状腺激素代谢改变,更多的医源性高血糖,通过合成代谢抵抗增加尿素循环活性,以及诱导介导长期发育障碍的表观遗传修饰。这些结果出乎许多儿科重症医师的意料。因此,在危重疾病的急性期,这种模式只是缓慢地开始向更严格的宏量营养素管理转变。早期禁食反应的好处已经很明显,只要给予微量营养素以防止缺乏和再进食综合症。这些见解为研究新的营养策略来激活禁食诱导的细胞修复,同时避免长期饥饿的研究开辟了新的视角。
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来源期刊
Clinical nutrition
Clinical nutrition 医学-营养学
CiteScore
14.10
自引率
6.30%
发文量
356
审稿时长
28 days
期刊介绍: Clinical Nutrition, the official journal of ESPEN, The European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism, is an international journal providing essential scientific information on nutritional and metabolic care and the relationship between nutrition and disease both in the setting of basic science and clinical practice. Published bi-monthly, each issue combines original articles and reviews providing an invaluable reference for any specialist concerned with these fields.
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