Cargando…

Impact of nutrition route on microaspiration in critically ill patients with shock: a planned ancillary study of the NUTRIREA-2 trial

BACKGROUND: Microaspiration of gastric and oropharyngeal secretions is the main mechanism of entry of bacteria into the lower respiratory tract in intubated critically ill patients. The aim of this study is to determine the impact of enteral nutrition, as compared with parenteral nutrition, on abund...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Nseir, Saad, Le Gouge, Amélie, Lascarrou, Jean-Baptiste, Lacherade, Jean-Claude, Jaillette, Emmanuelle, Mira, Jean-Paul, Mercier, Emmanuelle, Declercq, Pierre-Louis, Sirodot, Michel, Piton, Gaël, Tinturier, François, Coupez, Elisabeth, Gaudry, Stéphane, Djibré, Michel, Thevenin, Didier, Pasco, Jeremy, Balduyck, Malika, Zerimech, Farid, Reignier, Jean
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6451282/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30953553
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13054-019-2403-z
_version_ 1783409167707406336
author Nseir, Saad
Le Gouge, Amélie
Lascarrou, Jean-Baptiste
Lacherade, Jean-Claude
Jaillette, Emmanuelle
Mira, Jean-Paul
Mercier, Emmanuelle
Declercq, Pierre-Louis
Sirodot, Michel
Piton, Gaël
Tinturier, François
Coupez, Elisabeth
Gaudry, Stéphane
Djibré, Michel
Thevenin, Didier
Pasco, Jeremy
Balduyck, Malika
Zerimech, Farid
Reignier, Jean
author_facet Nseir, Saad
Le Gouge, Amélie
Lascarrou, Jean-Baptiste
Lacherade, Jean-Claude
Jaillette, Emmanuelle
Mira, Jean-Paul
Mercier, Emmanuelle
Declercq, Pierre-Louis
Sirodot, Michel
Piton, Gaël
Tinturier, François
Coupez, Elisabeth
Gaudry, Stéphane
Djibré, Michel
Thevenin, Didier
Pasco, Jeremy
Balduyck, Malika
Zerimech, Farid
Reignier, Jean
author_sort Nseir, Saad
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Microaspiration of gastric and oropharyngeal secretions is the main mechanism of entry of bacteria into the lower respiratory tract in intubated critically ill patients. The aim of this study is to determine the impact of enteral nutrition, as compared with parenteral nutrition, on abundant microaspiration of gastric contents and oropharyngeal secretions. METHODS: Planned ancillary study of the randomized controlled multicenter NUTRIREA2 trial. Patients with shock receiving invasive mechanical ventilation were randomized to receive early enteral or parenteral nutrition. All tracheal aspirates were collected during the 48 h following randomization. Abundant microaspiration of gastric contents and oropharyngeal secretions was defined as the presence of significant levels of pepsin (> 200 ng/ml) and salivary amylase (> 1685 UI/ml) in > 30% of tracheal aspirates. RESULTS: A total of 151 patients were included (78 and 73 patients in enteral and parenteral nutrition groups, respectively), and 1074 tracheal aspirates were quantitatively analyzed for pepsin and amylase. Although vomiting rate was significantly higher (31% vs 15%, p = 0.016), constipation rate was significantly lower (6% vs 21%, p = 0.010) in patients with enteral than in patients with parenteral nutrition. No significant difference was found regarding other patient characteristics. The percentage of patients with abundant microaspiration of gastric contents was significantly lower in enteral than in parenteral nutrition groups (14% vs 36%, p = 0.004; unadjusted OR 0.80 (95% CI 0.69, 0.93), adjusted OR 0.79 (0.76, 0.94)). The percentage of patients with abundant microaspiration of oropharyngeal secretions was significantly higher in enteral than in parenteral nutrition groups (74% vs 54%, p = 0.026; unadjusted OR 1.21 (95% CI 1.03, 1.44), adjusted OR 1.23 (1.01, 1.48)). No significant difference was found in percentage of patients with ventilator-associated pneumonia between enteral (8%) and parenteral (10%) nutrition groups (HR 0.78 (0.26, 2.28)). CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that enteral and parenteral nutrition are associated with high rates of microaspiration, although oropharyngeal microaspiration was more common with enteral nutrition and gastric microaspiration was more common with parenteral nutrition. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03411447. Registered 18 July 2017. Retrospectively registered.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6451282
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-64512822019-04-17 Impact of nutrition route on microaspiration in critically ill patients with shock: a planned ancillary study of the NUTRIREA-2 trial Nseir, Saad Le Gouge, Amélie Lascarrou, Jean-Baptiste Lacherade, Jean-Claude Jaillette, Emmanuelle Mira, Jean-Paul Mercier, Emmanuelle Declercq, Pierre-Louis Sirodot, Michel Piton, Gaël Tinturier, François Coupez, Elisabeth Gaudry, Stéphane Djibré, Michel Thevenin, Didier Pasco, Jeremy Balduyck, Malika Zerimech, Farid Reignier, Jean Crit Care Research BACKGROUND: Microaspiration of gastric and oropharyngeal secretions is the main mechanism of entry of bacteria into the lower respiratory tract in intubated critically ill patients. The aim of this study is to determine the impact of enteral nutrition, as compared with parenteral nutrition, on abundant microaspiration of gastric contents and oropharyngeal secretions. METHODS: Planned ancillary study of the randomized controlled multicenter NUTRIREA2 trial. Patients with shock receiving invasive mechanical ventilation were randomized to receive early enteral or parenteral nutrition. All tracheal aspirates were collected during the 48 h following randomization. Abundant microaspiration of gastric contents and oropharyngeal secretions was defined as the presence of significant levels of pepsin (> 200 ng/ml) and salivary amylase (> 1685 UI/ml) in > 30% of tracheal aspirates. RESULTS: A total of 151 patients were included (78 and 73 patients in enteral and parenteral nutrition groups, respectively), and 1074 tracheal aspirates were quantitatively analyzed for pepsin and amylase. Although vomiting rate was significantly higher (31% vs 15%, p = 0.016), constipation rate was significantly lower (6% vs 21%, p = 0.010) in patients with enteral than in patients with parenteral nutrition. No significant difference was found regarding other patient characteristics. The percentage of patients with abundant microaspiration of gastric contents was significantly lower in enteral than in parenteral nutrition groups (14% vs 36%, p = 0.004; unadjusted OR 0.80 (95% CI 0.69, 0.93), adjusted OR 0.79 (0.76, 0.94)). The percentage of patients with abundant microaspiration of oropharyngeal secretions was significantly higher in enteral than in parenteral nutrition groups (74% vs 54%, p = 0.026; unadjusted OR 1.21 (95% CI 1.03, 1.44), adjusted OR 1.23 (1.01, 1.48)). No significant difference was found in percentage of patients with ventilator-associated pneumonia between enteral (8%) and parenteral (10%) nutrition groups (HR 0.78 (0.26, 2.28)). CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that enteral and parenteral nutrition are associated with high rates of microaspiration, although oropharyngeal microaspiration was more common with enteral nutrition and gastric microaspiration was more common with parenteral nutrition. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03411447. Registered 18 July 2017. Retrospectively registered. BioMed Central 2019-04-05 /pmc/articles/PMC6451282/ /pubmed/30953553 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13054-019-2403-z Text en © The Author(s). 2019 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Nseir, Saad
Le Gouge, Amélie
Lascarrou, Jean-Baptiste
Lacherade, Jean-Claude
Jaillette, Emmanuelle
Mira, Jean-Paul
Mercier, Emmanuelle
Declercq, Pierre-Louis
Sirodot, Michel
Piton, Gaël
Tinturier, François
Coupez, Elisabeth
Gaudry, Stéphane
Djibré, Michel
Thevenin, Didier
Pasco, Jeremy
Balduyck, Malika
Zerimech, Farid
Reignier, Jean
Impact of nutrition route on microaspiration in critically ill patients with shock: a planned ancillary study of the NUTRIREA-2 trial
title Impact of nutrition route on microaspiration in critically ill patients with shock: a planned ancillary study of the NUTRIREA-2 trial
title_full Impact of nutrition route on microaspiration in critically ill patients with shock: a planned ancillary study of the NUTRIREA-2 trial
title_fullStr Impact of nutrition route on microaspiration in critically ill patients with shock: a planned ancillary study of the NUTRIREA-2 trial
title_full_unstemmed Impact of nutrition route on microaspiration in critically ill patients with shock: a planned ancillary study of the NUTRIREA-2 trial
title_short Impact of nutrition route on microaspiration in critically ill patients with shock: a planned ancillary study of the NUTRIREA-2 trial
title_sort impact of nutrition route on microaspiration in critically ill patients with shock: a planned ancillary study of the nutrirea-2 trial
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6451282/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30953553
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13054-019-2403-z
work_keys_str_mv AT nseirsaad impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT legougeamelie impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT lascarroujeanbaptiste impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT lacheradejeanclaude impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT jailletteemmanuelle impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT mirajeanpaul impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT mercieremmanuelle impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT declercqpierrelouis impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT sirodotmichel impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT pitongael impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT tinturierfrancois impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT coupezelisabeth impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT gaudrystephane impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT djibremichel impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT thevenindidier impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT pascojeremy impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT balduyckmalika impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT zerimechfarid impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial
AT reignierjean impactofnutritionrouteonmicroaspirationincriticallyillpatientswithshockaplannedancillarystudyofthenutrirea2trial