1 Division of Critical Care Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
2 Clinical Nutrition Department, Children's Hospital Colorado, Aurora, Colorado, USA.
JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr. 2017 Jul;41(5):706-742. doi: 10.1177/0148607117711387. Epub 2017 Jun 2.
This document represents the first collaboration between 2 organizations-the American Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition and the Society of Critical Care Medicine-to describe best practices in nutrition therapy in critically ill children. The target of these guidelines is intended to be the pediatric critically ill patient (>1 month and <18 years) expected to require a length of stay >2-3 days in a PICU admitting medical, surgical, and cardiac patients. In total, 2032 citations were scanned for relevance. The PubMed/MEDLINE search resulted in 960 citations for clinical trials and 925 citations for cohort studies. The EMBASE search for clinical trials culled 1661 citations. In total, the search for clinical trials yielded 1107 citations, whereas the cohort search yielded 925. After careful review, 16 randomized controlled trials and 37 cohort studies appeared to answer 1 of the 8 preidentified question groups for this guideline. We used the GRADE criteria (Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation) to adjust the evidence grade based on assessment of the quality of study design and execution. These guidelines are not intended for neonates or adult patients. The guidelines reiterate the importance of nutrition assessment-particularly, the detection of malnourished patients who are most vulnerable and therefore may benefit from timely intervention. There is a need for renewed focus on accurate estimation of energy needs and attention to optimizing protein intake. Indirect calorimetry, where feasible, and cautious use of estimating equations and increased surveillance for unintended caloric underfeeding and overfeeding are recommended. Optimal protein intake and its correlation with clinical outcomes are areas of great interest. The optimal route and timing of nutrient delivery are areas of intense debate and investigations. Enteral nutrition remains the preferred route for nutrient delivery. Several strategies to optimize enteral nutrition during critical illness have emerged. The role of supplemental parenteral nutrition has been highlighted, and a delayed approach appears to be beneficial. Immunonutrition cannot be currently recommended. Overall, the pediatric critical care population is heterogeneous, and a nuanced approach to individualizing nutrition support with the aim of improving clinical outcomes is necessary.
本文件代表美国肠外与肠内营养学会和危重病医学会这两个组织的首次合作,旨在描述危重症儿童营养治疗的最佳实践。这些指南的目标人群是预计需要在 PICU 中住院 2-3 天以上的儿科危重症患者(>1 个月至<18 岁),这些患者包括内科、外科和心脏患者。总共扫描了 2032 条参考文献以寻找相关性。PubMed/MEDLINE 的检索结果为临床试验提供了 960 条参考文献,为队列研究提供了 925 条参考文献。EMBASE 对临床试验的检索剔除了 1661 条参考文献。总的来说,临床试验检索共产生了 1107 条参考文献,而队列研究检索产生了 925 条参考文献。经过仔细审查,有 16 项随机对照试验和 37 项队列研究似乎回答了本指南的 8 个预先确定的问题组中的 1 个问题。我们使用 GRADE 标准(推荐分级的评估、制定与评价)根据研究设计和执行质量的评估来调整证据等级。这些指南不适用于新生儿或成年患者。指南重申了营养评估的重要性,特别是发现营养不良的患者,这些患者最脆弱,因此可能受益于及时干预。需要重新关注准确估计能量需求,并注意优化蛋白质摄入。建议在可行的情况下使用间接热量测定法,谨慎使用估算方程,并增加对意外热量摄入不足和过度喂养的监测。最佳蛋白质摄入量及其与临床结局的相关性是非常感兴趣的领域。最佳的营养物质输送途径和时间是激烈争论和研究的领域。肠内营养仍然是营养物质输送的首选途径。在危重症期间优化肠内营养的几种策略已经出现。补充肠外营养的作用已经得到强调,延迟方法似乎是有益的。免疫营养目前无法推荐。总的来说,儿科危重症患者群体具有异质性,需要采用细致入微的方法对营养支持进行个体化,以改善临床结局。