Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT01206166

Trial of Supplemental Parenteral Nutrition in Under and Over Weight Critically Ill Patients (TOP-UP)

A Randomized Trial of Supplemental Parenteral Nutrition in Under and Over Weight Critically Ill Patients: The TOP UP Trial (Pilot)

Status
Terminated
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
125 (actual)
Sponsor
Clinical Evaluation Research Unit at Kingston General Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The specific aim of the proposed study is to conduct a pilot study involving 160 critically-ill lean and obese patients enrolled at 11 sites in Canada, the United States of America, Belgium and France in order to: Specific Aims * Confirm that we can achieve a clinically significant difference in calorie and protein intake between the two intervention groups. * Estimate recruitment rate i.e. number of eligible and enrolled patients per month per site. * Evaluate the safety, tolerance, and logistics around providing supplemental PN in the study population in the context of a multicenter trial, e.g. * To ensure adequate glycemic control in both groups. * To ensure that the other metabolic consequences of the feeding strategies are minimized. * To establish adequate compliance with study protocols and completion of case report forms A secondary aim of this pilot study will be: • To explore the effect of differential effects of calorie and protein delivery on muscle and mass function.

Detailed description

Background Critically ill patients are often hypermetabolic and can rapidly become nutritionally compromised. Malnutrition is prevalent in these patients and has been associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Standard nutrition therapy, i.e. provision of calories, protein and other nutrients consists primarily of enteral nutrition (via a feeding tube into the gastrointestinal tract), parenteral nutrition (via an intravenous tube into the blood), or occasionally a combination of both. However, the provision of nutrition is sub-optimal and the majority of critically-ill patients do not meet nutritional requirements. Recent studies report that average energy intakes of critically ill patients are only 49% to 70% of calculated requirements. Despite repeated, sustained efforts over the past few years, the investigators have not significantly improved the amount of calories delivered via the enteral route. This leads us to conclude that if the investigators are to be successful at increasing the provision of calories and protein to patients at-risk, the investigators will have to supplement the calories via the parenteral route. Critically ill patients that are at extremes of weight are at a higher nutritional risk and have higher mortality rates. A recent International multicenter observational study of 2772 ICU patients from 165 ICUs showed a significant inverse linear relationship between the odds of mortality and total daily calories received. Increased amounts of calories was most important for the BMI \< 20 group followed by the BMI 20 -\< 25 group and BMI \> 35 group with no benefit of increased calorie intake for patients in the BMI 25 -\< 35 group. Feeding an additional 1000 kcals almost halved the odds of 60-day mortality in patients with a BMI \< 25 or \> 35. Similar results were observed for feeding an additional 30 grams of protein per day. Thus, a prospective randomized trial is warranted to confirm our hypothesis that in patients with a BMI of \< 25 and those with a BMI \> 35 increasing the provision of more energy and protein can impact clinical outcomes. The results of this study will serve to answer some fundamental questions with regards to impact of amount of energy and protein delivered to nutritional at-risk ICU patients and will inform current practice. Study Intervention: Patients will be randomized to one of 2 interventions: enteral nutrition alone or enteral nutrition plus parenteral nutrition (supplemental PN group).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGOlimel (5.7%E / N9E)OLIMEL(Amino Acids, Dextrose, Lipids, with / without Electrolytes) is indicated for parenteral nutrition for adults when oral or enteral nutrition is impossible, insufficient or contraindicated.

Timeline

Start date
2011-06-01
Primary completion
2015-03-01
Completion
2015-07-01
First posted
2010-09-21
Last updated
2021-03-16
Results posted
2021-03-16

Locations

12 sites across 4 countries: United States, Belgium, Canada, France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01206166. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.