McWilliams David, Gustafson Owen, Wyer Nicola, Couper Keith, Kimani Peter, Kandiyali Rebecca, Barghouthy Dalia, Haylett Rebekah, Richardson Holly, Negus-Fancey Miles, King Elizabeth, Gallie L, Puthucheary Zudin
Centre for Care Excellence, Coventry University, Coventry, UK
Critical Care, University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust, Coventry, UK.
BMJ Open. 2025 Mar 27;15(3):e100803. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2025-100803.
Each year in the UK, 140 000 patients are discharged from intensive care units (ICUs) to general hospital wards, almost all with complex rehabilitation needs. 84% of patients still require nutritional support and 98% are not physically independent. Despite this, many are discharged from ICU without a nutrition plan, and failure to recognise malnutrition is common. Consequently, malnutrition persists in the ward environment, leading to poor outcomes and acting as a barrier to successful physical rehabilitation. This transition from intensive care to the ward represents a key stage in the recovery journey, and a window for optimising physical independence prior to hospital discharge, decreasing the need for support in the community. However, uncertainty as to how best to provide ongoing rehabilitation which combines adequate nutrition and exercise on the general ward has driven widespread variation in practice.We have previously shown the benefits of delivering a structured rehabilitation strategy in the ICU. However, the ward environment poses different challenges to the development of an integrated rehabilitation pathway. There is a need to evaluate the clinical and cost-effectiveness of structured rehabilitation strategies when delivered outside the ICU.
Physiotherapy and Optimised Enteral Nutrition In the post-acute phase of critical illness is a bi-centre, mixed methods feasibility randomised controlled trial (RCT). 60 patients will be recruited from ICUs at two acute National Health Service Trusts and randomised on a 1:1 basis to receive either individualised physiotherapy and optimised nutrition post discharge from ICU (intervention) or standard care. The primary objective is to assess the acceptability of the intervention and feasibility of a future, multicentre RCT. The primary outcome measures, which will determine feasibility, are recruitment and retention rates, and intervention fidelity. Acceptability of the intervention will be evaluated through semistructured interviews of participants and staff. Secondary outcome measures include collecting baseline, clinical and outcome data to inform the power calculations of a future definitive trial.
Ethical approval has been obtained through the Wales Research and Ethics Committee 2 (24/WA/0050). We aim to disseminate the findings through international conferences, international peer-reviewed journals and social media.
NCT06159868. Prospectively registered on 28 November 2023.
在英国,每年有140000名患者从重症监护病房(ICU)转出至综合医院病房,几乎所有人都有复杂的康复需求。84%的患者仍需要营养支持,98%的患者无法独立活动。尽管如此,许多患者在未制定营养计划的情况下就从ICU转出,而且未能识别营养不良的情况很常见。因此,营养不良在病房环境中持续存在,导致预后不良,并成为成功进行身体康复的障碍。从重症监护到病房的这一过渡阶段是康复过程中的关键阶段,也是在出院前优化身体独立性、减少社区支持需求的一个契机。然而,对于如何在普通病房提供结合充足营养和运动的持续康复治疗,目前尚不确定,这导致了实际操作中的广泛差异。我们之前已经证明了在ICU实施结构化康复策略的益处。然而,病房环境给综合康复路径的制定带来了不同的挑战。有必要评估在ICU之外实施结构化康复策略的临床效果和成本效益。
“危重症后急性期的物理治疗与优化肠内营养”是一项双中心、混合方法的可行性随机对照试验(RCT)。将从两个急性国民健康服务信托基金的ICU招募60名患者,并按1:1的比例随机分组,分别接受ICU出院后的个性化物理治疗和优化营养(干预组)或标准护理。主要目标是评估干预措施的可接受性以及未来多中心RCT的可行性。决定可行性的主要结局指标是招募率和保留率,以及干预的保真度。将通过对参与者和工作人员进行半结构化访谈来评估干预措施的可接受性。次要结局指标包括收集基线、临床和结局数据,以为未来确定性试验的样本量计算提供依据。
已获得威尔士研究与伦理委员会2(24/WA/0050)的伦理批准。我们旨在通过国际会议、国际同行评审期刊和社交媒体传播研究结果。
NCT06159868。于2023年11月28日进行前瞻性注册。