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RecruitingNCT05865314

Optimised Nutritional Therapy and Early Physiotherapy in Long Term ICU Patients (NutriPhyT Trial)

Optimised Nutritional Therapy and Early Physiotherapy in Long Term ICU Patients: a Randomized Controlled Study (NutriPhyT Trial)

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
164 (estimated)
Sponsor
HEIDEGGER CP · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Due to medical advances and quality of care, mortality in adult intensive care units (ICUs) has decreased significantly in recent years, leading to a significant increase in the number of patients with high rehabilitation needs on discharge from the ICU. A specific management by a multidisciplinary team has been set up since 2017 at the Geneva-ICU for long-stay patients (hospitalised ≥ 7 days). This study aim to assess whether an optimization of the nutritional therapy coupled with an early mobility during and after the ICU stay allows an improvement in the muscle function at hospital discharge compared to patients receiving the standard care.

Detailed description

Due to medical advances and quality of care, mortality in adult intensive care units (ICUs) has decreased significantly in recent years, leading to a significant increase in the number of patients with high rehabilitation needs on discharge from the ICU. Indeed, these patients are at high risk of complications related to their ICU stay (cognitive impairment, ICU acquired weakness, diaphragm dysfunction, ICU polyneuropathy, post-traumatic stress, malnutrition, etc.). Despite prolonged periods of rehabilitation, there is a significant decrease in functional status and quality of life compared to the previous status of these patient. A specific management by a multidisciplinary team has been set up since 2017 at the Geneva-ICU for long-stay patients (hospitalised ≥ 7 days) including special attention to weaning from ventilation, nutrition, mobilisation, anxiety, pain, skin condition etc. The culture of nutritional therapy and early mobilisation is already well established at the Geneva-ICU. However, a comprehensive approach to nutrition and mobilisation during and after the ICU stay could be optimised. The objective of the study is to determine whether optimization of nutritional therapy combined with early mobilization for patients with long ICU stay will improve muscle function at discharge compared with patients receiving standard care.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHEROptimisation of nutrition therapy coupled with early mobilisationOptimisation of nutrition therapy coupled with early mobilisation with: * Optimisation of nutrition therapy during ICU stay * Optimisation of physiotherapy during ICU stay * Better communication and closer collaboration between physiotherapy and nutrition teams. * Optimisation of continuity of the care.
OTHERStandard carePatients will receive nutritional therapy and mobilisation according to local standard procedures.

Timeline

Start date
2023-05-01
Primary completion
2026-06-01
Completion
2026-09-01
First posted
2023-05-18
Last updated
2025-08-12

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Switzerland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05865314. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.