Department of Allied Health (Clinical Nutrition), Royal Melbourne Hospital, Melbourne, Australia; Department of Critical Care, Melbourne Medical School, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.
Department of Allied Health (Clinical Nutrition), Royal Melbourne Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
Clin Nutr. 2024 Oct;43(10):2458-2472. doi: 10.1016/j.clnu.2024.09.025. Epub 2024 Sep 13.
It is plausible that supplementation with specific amino acids or metabolites could attenuate skeletal muscle wasting during critical illness. The aim of this systematic review was to explore if amino acids or their derivatives impact skeletal muscle wastage in critically ill adults.
Four databases were systematically searched to identify randomised control trials which delivered enteral supplemental amino acids, or their metabolites compared with placebo, standard care or no intervention, to critically ill patients and reported outcomes of skeletal muscle mass, plasma amino acids, nitrogen balance, or muscle strength. Two authors independently completed screening, data extraction, and risk of bias assessment using the Cochrane Risk of Bias 2 Tool. A meta-analysis was planned but heterogeneity in the type of intervention used and outcome assessment precluded this. Therefore, data were synthesised using vote counting.
Thirty randomised control trials, comprising 1976 patients were included. The most frequently studied interventional amino acid or metabolite was glutamine (n = 12 trials), a combination (n = 9), arginine (n = 6), β-hydroxy β-methylbutyrate (HMB) (n = 2) or ornithine (n = 1). Six trials (including 284 participants) measured skeletal muscle following supplementation, four of which used HMB alone or in combination as the intervention. Of these, one trial observed an attenuation of muscle wasting with a combination of amino acids, one observed an exacerbation of muscle wasting with HMB, three trials observed no impact on muscle wasting with HMB or a combination of amino acids and one trial reported no information.
Six trials have investigated the effect of enteral amino acid or amino acid metabolite supplementation on muscle mass in critically ill. Heterogeneity of interventions, outcome assessments and direction of effects limits the certainty regarding the effect of supplemental amino acids, or their metabolites, on skeletal muscle wasting during critical illness. The trial protocol is registered on PROSPERO (CRD42021275989).
补充特定的氨基酸或代谢物可能会减轻危重病患者的骨骼肌消耗。本系统评价的目的是探讨氨基酸或其衍生物是否会影响危重症成人的骨骼肌消耗。
系统检索了四个数据库,以确定给予肠内补充氨基酸或其代谢物与安慰剂、标准护理或无干预相比,对危重症患者报告骨骼肌质量、血浆氨基酸、氮平衡或肌肉力量结局的随机对照试验。两名作者独立完成筛选、数据提取和使用 Cochrane 偏倚风险 2 工具进行偏倚风险评估。计划进行荟萃分析,但由于干预类型和结局评估的异质性,无法进行荟萃分析。因此,使用投票计数法对数据进行综合。
纳入了 30 项随机对照试验,共 1976 名患者。研究最多的干预性氨基酸或代谢物是谷氨酰胺(n=12 项试验)、联合(n=9 项)、精氨酸(n=6 项)、β-羟基-β-甲基丁酸(HMB)(n=2 项)或鸟氨酸(n=1 项)。6 项试验(包括 284 名参与者)在补充后测量骨骼肌,其中 4 项试验单独或联合使用 HMB 作为干预措施。其中,1 项试验观察到氨基酸联合治疗可减轻肌肉消耗,1 项试验观察到 HMB 可加重肌肉消耗,3 项试验观察到 HMB 或氨基酸联合治疗对肌肉消耗无影响,1 项试验未报告信息。
6 项试验研究了肠内氨基酸或氨基酸代谢物补充对危重病患者肌肉质量的影响。干预措施、结局评估和效应方向的异质性限制了补充氨基酸或其代谢物对危重病期间骨骼肌消耗的影响的确定性。试验方案在 PROSPERO(CRD42021275989)上注册。