Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00654719

Enteral Nutrition in Congestive Heart Failure and Cardiac Cachexia

The Influence of Enteral Nutrition on Functional Status and Inflammatory Activation in Patients With Congestive Heart Failure and Cardiac Cachexia.

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
29 (actual)
Sponsor
National Heart and Lung Institute · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of a high caloric drink on weight and several other clinical markers including quality of life in patients with unintentional weight loss (cachexia) due to chronic heart failure.

Detailed description

Cardiac cachexia has been shown to be powerful independent predictor of mortality in patients with congestive heart failure (CHF). Unlike starvation, cachectic CHF patients present with a decrease of muscles and/or fat tissue. This probably depends, at least in part, on the level of inflammatory activation. Theoretically, it seems clear that nutritional status has to be improved in cardiac cachexia. It has been suggested that inflammatory activation in CHF may be due to endotoxin translocation through the edematous gut wall. Elevated endotoxin levels have been found in patients with acutely decompensated CHF, but these levels normalized with diuretic treatment. This finding may be of utmost importance. From one side it underscores the need for aggressive diuretic treatment to prevent translocation, from another side however, it suggests potential area for enteral treatment. Enteral route of nutrition may be highly beneficial by diminishing bacterial translocation from guts and/or endotoxin transfer, finally resulting in lower inflammatory activation Numerous experimental studies display that enteral feeding reduces bacterial translocation, endotoxin absorption and positively modulates function of local immune tissue. A search of the literature shows that very little is known about the effectiveness of nutritional support on functional performance in cachectic CHF patients and actually no reports concern the influence of enteral feeding on immune activation of cachectic CHF patients. Recent information of some links existing between leptin, which is increased in CHF, and inflammatory activation in this syndrome speculate on a functional role of leptin in immune activation in CHF. As leptin is one of the most important hormones in the regulation of body energy metabolism, we think it is reasonable to look also into enteral feeding -induced changes of leptin and concomitant fluctuations of plasma cytokines. During the last 12 months we have been using nutritional support in cachectic patients with CHF as an adjunct to standard therapy. We were surprised by a significant functional improvement that we observed in many instances. As most of these patients were subjected to aggressive multi-drug diuretic therapy as well, it was impossible to appreciate the role of enteral nutrition in this respect. We think, these observations are worth verification in more controlled prospective studies.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTNutriDrinkNutritional supplementation that contains 600 kcal/day: protein content 20 g, carbohydrates 72 g, fat 26 g
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTPlaceboNutritional supplementation containing only 12 kcal/day

Timeline

Start date
2001-04-01
Primary completion
2002-02-01
Completion
2002-02-01
First posted
2008-04-09
Last updated
2008-04-09

Locations

2 sites across 2 countries: Germany, Poland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00654719. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.