Caloric intake and the fat-to-carbohydrate ratio in hypercapnic acute respiratory failure: Post-hoc analysis of the PermiT trial

Abstract

Background: The effect of moderate caloric enteral intake in critically ill patients with hypercapnic acute respiratory failure (HCARF) is unclear. We studied the impact of permissive underfeeding (PUF) compared with standard feeding (SF) on various HCARF outcomes. Materials and methods: The PermiT trial randomized 894 patients to either PUF (40–60% caloric requirement) or SF (70–100% requirement) with similar protein intake and found no difference in mortality, mechanical ventilation (MV) duration and ventilator-free days. In this post-hoc study, we restricted analysis to mechanically-ventilated patients with HCARF (PaCO 2 >45 mmHg on the first two study days) and assessed the impact of trial interventions and fat-to-carbohydrate ratio on outcomes. Results: One-hundred-twenty patients had HCARF (59 PUF and 61 SF, age 53.7 ± 17.8 years, body mass index 31.1 ± 11.2 kg/m 2 , Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II score 21.7 ± 7.1 and day-1 PaCO 2 61 ± 16 mmHg). Caloric intake was 815 ± 270 kcal/day in PUF group and 1289 ± 407 kcal/day in SF group. The two groups had similar PaCO 2 levels during ICU stay. The 90-day mortality (33.9% versus 35.6%, p = 0.85), MV duration (10.7 ± 6.8 versus 11.1 ± 8.1 days, p = 0.56) and ventilator-free days (52.9 ± 38.6 versus 51.2 ± 38.0 days, p = 0.80) were also similar in PUF and SF groups, respectively. Ventilator-free days and 90-day mortality were similar when the fat-to-carbohydrate ratio was < or ≥ the median value (0.73) in all patients and in PUF and SF groups. Conclusions: In patients with HCARF, SF and PUF were associated with similar PaCO 2 , MV duration, ventilator-free days and mortality. Fat-to-carbohydrate ratio was not associated with mortality or ventilator-free days. Trial registration: ISRCTN Registry: ISRCTN68144998. © 2018 European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism

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Copd, Critical illness, Enteral nutrition, Hypercapnia, Hypoventilation syndrome, Ventilator associated pneumonia, Adult, Aged, Body mass index, Carbohydrates, Energy intake, Fats, Female, Humans, Linear models, Male, Middle aged, Multivariate analysis, Obesity hypoventilation syndrome, Respiration, artificial, Respiratory insufficiency, Ventilators, mechanical, Carbohydrate, Fat, Acute respiratory failure, Adult respiratory distress syndrome, All cause mortality, Apache, Article, Artificial ventilation, Body mass, Caloric intake, Chronic obstructive lung disease, Controlled study, Critically ill patient, Glucose blood level, Hospitalization, Human, Intensive care unit, Length of stay, Major clinical study, Malnutrition, Mortality, Multicenter study, Nutritional status, Obesity, Organ dysfunction score, Pneumonia, Post hoc analysis, Practice guideline, Randomized controlled trial, Respiratory tract infection, Sepsis, Traumatic brain injury, Complication, Mechanical ventilator, Respiratory failure, Statistical model

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