Department of Health Sciences, Faculty of Applied Health Sciences, Brock University, St. Catharines, ON, Canada.
School of Public Health, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada.
PLoS One. 2022 Aug 2;17(8):e0272513. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0272513. eCollection 2022.
Elderly long-term care residents (ELTCRs) face considerable burden of infection, especially evident during the COVID-19 pandemic. The nutritional status of the host can influence susceptibility to infection by altering immune system integrity, therefore, nutrition-based interventions may be a viable complement to existing infection prevention measures.
This scoping review sought to identify nutritional interventions and factors that have the strongest evidence to benefit ELTCRs, and thus best poised for rigorous clinical trial evaluation and subsequent implementation.
A database search of OVID-Medline, OVID-Embase, and Web of Science was performed from 2011 to 2021 to identify nutritional intervention studies which attribute to changes in infection in contemporary ELTCR settings. Articles were screened in duplicate and data extraction completed by a single reviewer, while a second reviewer verified the data which was fitted to identify evidence for nutritional interventions related to reducing rates of infection among ELTCRs.
The search identified 1018 studies, of which 11 (nine clinical trials and two observational cohort studies) satisfied screening criteria. Interventions that significantly reduced risk of infection included whey protein (any infection), Black Chokeberry (urinary tract infection), and vitamin D (acute respiratory tract infection, skin and soft tissue infection). Both zinc and a dedicated meal-plan significantly improved lymphocyte parameters. Vitamin D deficiency was associated with the development of respiratory tract infections. Probiotic and soy-based protein interventions did not significantly affect risk of infection or lymphocyte parameters, respectively.
The current scoping review was effective in identifying the use of nutrition-based interventions for infection prevention among ELTCRs. In this study, some nutrition-based interventions were observed to significantly influence the risk of infection among ELTCRs. Nutritional interventions such as vitamin D (preventing deficiency/insufficiency), Black Chokeberry juice, zinc gluconate, whey protein, and varied and nutrient dense meal plans may be suitable for future rigorous clinical trial evaluation.
老年长期护理居民(ELTCR)面临着相当大的感染负担,尤其是在 COVID-19 大流行期间。宿主的营养状况可以通过改变免疫系统的完整性来影响感染的易感性,因此,基于营养的干预措施可能是现有感染预防措施的可行补充。
本范围综述旨在确定对 ELTCR 最有证据支持的营养干预措施和因素,从而最适合进行严格的临床试验评估和随后的实施。
从 2011 年到 2021 年,对 OVID-Medline、OVID-Embase 和 Web of Science 数据库进行了检索,以确定归因于当代 ELTCR 环境中感染变化的营养干预研究。文章由两名审查员进行重复筛选,由一名审查员完成数据提取,而另一名审查员则验证数据,以确定与降低 ELTCR 感染率相关的营养干预措施的证据。
检索共确定了 1018 项研究,其中 11 项(9 项临床试验和 2 项观察性队列研究)符合筛选标准。显著降低感染风险的干预措施包括乳清蛋白(任何感染)、黑接骨木(尿路感染)和维生素 D(急性呼吸道感染、皮肤和软组织感染)。锌和专门的膳食计划都显著改善了淋巴细胞参数。维生素 D 缺乏与呼吸道感染的发展有关。益生菌和大豆蛋白干预措施分别对感染风险或淋巴细胞参数没有显著影响。
本范围综述有效地确定了营养干预措施在 ELTCR 感染预防中的应用。在这项研究中,一些营养干预措施被观察到显著影响 ELTCR 感染的风险。维生素 D(预防缺乏/不足)、黑接骨木汁、葡萄糖酸锌、乳清蛋白以及多样化和营养丰富的膳食计划等营养干预措施可能适合未来进行严格的临床试验评估。