Department of Community Health and Epidemiology, Queen's University, and Clinical Evaluation Research Unit, Kingston General Hospital, Kingston, ON, Canada.
Crit Care Med. 2010 Feb;38(2):395-401. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0b013e3181c0263d.
To describe current nutrition practices in intensive care units and determine "best achievable" practice relative to evidence-based Critical Care Nutrition Clinical Practice Guidelines.
An international, prospective, observational, cohort study conducted January to June 2007.
One hundred fifty-eight adult intensive care units from 20 countries.
Two-thousand nine-hundred forty-six consecutively enrolled mechanically ventilated adult patients (mean, 18.6 per site) who stayed in the intensive care unit for at least 72 hrs.
Data on nutrition practices were collected from intensive care unit admission to intensive care unit discharge or a maximum of 12 days.
Relative to recommendations of the Clinical Practice Guidelines, we report average, best, and worst site performance on key nutrition practices. Adherence to Clinical Practice Guideline recommendations was high for some recommendations: use of enteral nutrition in preference to parenteral nutrition, glycemic control, lack of utilization of arginine-enriched enteral formulas, delivery of hypocaloric parenteral nutrition, and the presence of a feeding protocol. However, significant practice gaps were identified for other recommendations. Average time to start of enteral nutrition was 46.5 hrs (site average range, 8.2-149.1 hrs). The average use of motility agents and small bowel feeding in patients who had high gastric residual volumes was 58.7% (site average range, 0%-100%) and 14.7% (site average range, 0%-100%), respectively. There was poor adherence to recommendations for the use of enteral formulas enriched with fish oils, glutamine supplementation, timing of supplemental parenteral nutrition, and avoidance of soybean oil-based parenteral lipids. Average nutritional adequacy was 59% (site average range, 20.5%-94.4%) for energy and 60.3% (site average range, 18.6%-152.5%) for protein.
Despite high adherence to some recommendations, large gaps exist between many recommendations and actual practice in intensive care units, and consequently nutrition therapy is suboptimal. We have identified "best achievable" practice that can serve as targets for future quality improvement initiatives.
描述重症监护病房当前的营养实践,并确定相对于基于循证的重症监护营养临床实践指南的“最佳可实现”实践。
2007 年 1 月至 6 月进行的一项国际性、前瞻性、观察性、队列研究。
来自 20 个国家的 158 个成人重症监护病房。
2946 例连续纳入的机械通气成年患者(平均每个地点 18.6 例),在重症监护病房至少停留 72 小时。
从重症监护病房入院到重症监护病房出院或最多 12 天期间收集营养实践的数据。
相对于临床实践指南的建议,我们报告了关键营养实践的平均、最佳和最差站点表现。一些建议的临床实践指南建议的遵守率很高:优先使用肠内营养而非肠外营养、血糖控制、避免使用精氨酸强化肠内配方、提供低热量肠外营养以及存在喂养方案。然而,其他建议仍存在显著的实践差距。开始肠内营养的平均时间为 46.5 小时(地点平均范围为 8.2-149.1 小时)。在胃残留量高的患者中,使用动力药物和小肠喂养的平均使用率分别为 58.7%(地点平均范围为 0%-100%)和 14.7%(地点平均范围为 0%-100%)。对于使用富含鱼油的肠内配方、谷氨酰胺补充剂、补充性肠外营养的时间以及避免使用大豆油基肠外脂质的建议,遵守率较差。能量的平均营养充足率为 59%(地点平均范围为 20.5%-94.4%),蛋白质的平均营养充足率为 60.3%(地点平均范围为 18.6%-152.5%)。
尽管对一些建议的遵守率很高,但重症监护病房的许多建议与实际实践之间存在很大差距,因此营养治疗效果不佳。我们已经确定了“最佳可实现”的实践,可以作为未来质量改进计划的目标。