Current practice in nutritional support and its association with mortality in septic patients--results from a national, prospective, multicenter study.
Crit Care Med. 2008 Jun; 36(6):1762-7.CC

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To identify current clinical practice regarding nutrition and its association with morbidity and mortality in patients with severe sepsis or septic shock in Germany.

DESIGN

Nationwide prospective, observational, cross-sectional, 1-day point-prevalence study.

SETTING

The study included 454 intensive care units from a representative sample of 310 hospitals stratified by size.

PATIENTS

Participants were 415 patients with severe sepsis or septic shock (according to criteria of the American College of Chest Physicians/Society of Critical Care Medicine Consensus Conference).

INTERVENTIONS

None.

MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS

Data were collected by on-site audits of trained external study physicians during randomly scheduled visits during 1 yr. Valid data on nutrition were available for 399 of 415 patients. The data showed that 20.1% of patients received exclusively enteral nutrition, 35.1% exclusively parenteral nutrition, and 34.6% mixed nutrition (parenteral and enteral); 10.3% were not fed at all. Patients with gastrointestinal/intra-abdominal infection, pancreatitis or neoplasm of the gastrointestinal tract, mechanical ventilation, or septic shock were less likely to receive exclusively enteral nutrition. Median Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II and Sepsis-related Organ Failure Assessment scores were significantly different among the nutrition groups. Overall hospital mortality was 55.2%. Hospital mortality was significantly higher in patients receiving exclusively parenteral (62.3%) or mixed nutrition (57.1%) than in patients with exclusively enteral nutrition (38.9%) (p = .005). After adjustment for patient morbidity (Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II score, presence of septic shock) and treatment factors (mechanical ventilation), multivariate analysis revealed that the presence of parenteral nutrition was significantly predictive of mortality (odds ratio, 2.09; 95% confidence interval, 1.29-3.37).

CONCLUSIONS

Patients with severe sepsis or septic shock in German intensive care units received preferentially parenteral or mixed nutrition. The use of parenteral nutrition was associated with an increased risk of death.

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Authors+Show Affiliations

Elke G
Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University Medical Center Schleswig-Holstein, Campus Kiel, Germany. elke@anaesthesie.uni-kiel.de
Schädler D
No affiliation info available
Engel C
No affiliation info available
Bogatsch H
No affiliation info available
Frerichs I
No affiliation info available
Ragaller M
No affiliation info available
Scholz J
No affiliation info available
Brunkhorst FM
No affiliation info available
Löffler M
No affiliation info available
Reinhart K
No affiliation info available
Weiler N
No affiliation info available
German Competence Network Sepsis (SepNet)
No affiliation info available

MeSH

APACHEAgedCritical PathwaysCross-Sectional StudiesEnteral NutritionFemaleGermanyHealth Facility SizeHospital MortalityHospitals, GeneralHospitals, UniversityHumansIntensive Care UnitsLength of StayMaleMedical AuditMiddle AgedOdds RatioParenteral Nutrition, TotalProspective StudiesShock, SepticSurvival Rate

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Multicenter Study
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

18496367