Initial trophic vs full enteral feeding in patients with acute lung injury:
the EDEN randomized trial.
CONTEXT:
The amount of enteral nutrition patients with
acute lung injury need is unknown.
OBJECTIVE:
To determine if initial lower-volume trophic
enteral feeding would increase ventilator-free days and decrease
gastrointestinal intolerances compared with initial full enteral feeding.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS:
The EDEN study, a randomized, open-label,
multicenter trial conducted from January 2, 2008, through April 12, 2011.
Participants were 1000 adults within 48 hours of developing acute lung
injury requiring mechanical ventilation whose physicians intended to start
enteral nutrition at 44 hospitals in the National Heart, Lung, and Blood
Institute ARDS Clinical Trials Network.
INTERVENTIONS:
Participants were randomized to receive either
trophic or full enteral feeding for the first 6 days. After day 6, the care of
all patients who were still receiving mechanical ventilation was managed
according to the full feeding protocol.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES:
Ventilator-free days to study day 28.
RESULTS:
Baseline characteristics were similar between
the trophic-feeding (n = 508) and full-feeding (n = 492) groups. The
full-feeding group received more enteral calories for the first 6 days, about 1300 kcal/d compared with 400
kcal/d (P < .001). Initial trophic feeding did not increase the number
of ventilator-free days (14.9 [95% CI, 13.9 to 15.8] vs 15.0 [95% CI, 14.1 to
15.9]; difference, -0.1 [95% CI, -1.4 to 1.2]; P = .89) or reduce 60-day
mortality (23.2% [95% CI, 19.6% to 26.9%] vs 22.2% [95% CI, 18.5% to 25.8%];
difference, 1.0% [95% CI, -4.1% to 6.3%]; P = .77) compared with full feeding.
There were no differences in infectious complications between the groups. Despite receiving more prokinetic agents, the
full-feeding group experienced more vomiting (2.2% vs 1.7% of patient
feeding days; P = .05), elevated gastric
residual volumes (4.9% vs 2.2% of feeding days; P < .001), and constipation (3.1% vs 2.1% of
feeding days; P = .003). Mean plasma glucose values and average hourly insulin
administration were both higher in the full-feeding group over the first 6
days.
CONCLUSION:
In patients with acute lung injury, compared
with full enteral feeding, a strategy of initial trophic enteral feeding for up
to 6 days did not improve ventilator-free days, 60-day mortality, or infectious
complications but was associated with less gastrointestinal intolerance.
Reference:
Initial
trophic vs full enteral feeding in patients with acute lung injury: the EDEN
randomized trial. -
JAMA. 2012 Feb 22;307(8):795-803. - 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, Morris A, Dong N, Rock P.
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