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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07270939

Optimizing Enteral Nutrition Regimen for Critically Ill Patients

Optimizing Enteral Nutrition: A Comparative Study of 18-Hour, 20-Hour, and 24-Hour

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
150 (estimated)
Sponsor
Hamad Medical Corporation · Industry
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Clinical Trial The goal of this clinical trial is to learn whether different enteral feeding cycles (18-hour, 20-hour, or standard 24-hour continuous feeding) improve outcomes for critically ill ICU patients who need tube feeding. It will also look at tolerance, nutrition delivery, and safety. The main questions it aims to answer are: Do shorter feeding cycles (with fasting windows) reduce ICU length of stay? Do they lower the risk of infections like ventilator-associated pneumonia? How do they affect calorie delivery, blood sugar control, and gastrointestinal tolerance? Researchers will compare: Continuous 24-hour feeding (standard care) 20-hour feeding with a 4-hour fasting window 18-hour feeding with a 6-hour fasting window Participants will: Be critically ill adults in the ICU who require at least 7 days of enteral feeding Be randomized to one of the three feeding schedules Receive daily monitoring of calories, protein, blood sugar, and GI tolerance Have outcomes measured, including ICU length of stay, infections, metabolic control, and feeding tolerance

Detailed description

This randomized controlled trial will compare three enteral feeding regimens in critically ill ICU patients: standard 24-hour continuous feeding, 20-hour cycled feeding with a 4-hour fasting window, and 18-hour cycled feeding with a 6-hour fasting window. The rationale is that continuous feeding may impair metabolic regulation, increase insulin requirements, and contribute to gastrointestinal intolerance, while cycled feeding could better align with circadian rhythms, support metabolic balance, and reduce complications such as ventilator-associated pneumonia. Approximately 150 adult patients who require enteral nutrition for at least seven days will be enrolled across Hamad Medical Corporation ICUs. Participants will be randomized in a 1:1:1 ratio using block randomization through REDCap to ensure allocation concealment. All groups will receive isocaloric enteral nutrition through nasogastric or orogastric tubes, with caloric and protein targets guided by indirect calorimetry or weight-based calculations. Feeding plans will be initiated within 24 hours of ICU admission or stabilization. Patients assigned to the 18-hour and 20-hour arms will have structured fasting periods, while the control group will receive uninterrupted feeding. Daily assessments will capture nutritional delivery, gastrointestinal tolerance, and metabolic parameters, along with safety monitoring for adverse events. Data will be collected electronically via REDCap, de-identified, and audited regularly by the Clinical Trial Unit. The study is designed to generate high-quality evidence on whether incorporating fasting windows into feeding schedules can optimize nutrition therapy, improve tolerance, reduce ICU stays, and minimize complications. Findings are expected to inform future ICU nutrition guidelines and contribute to the global discussion on intermittent versus continuous feeding practices.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORAL20-Hour Cycled Enteral Nutrition with a 4-Hour Fasting Window20-Hour Cycled Enteral Nutrition with a 4-Hour Fasting Window (Intervention 1) Objective: To evaluate the physiological benefits of a structured daily fasting period while maintaining a conservative approach to caloric delivery.
BEHAVIORAL18-Hour Cycled Enteral Nutrition with a 6-Hour Fasting WindowFeeding Schedule involves enteral nutrition over an 18-hour period while incorporating a 6-hour fasting window in each 24-hour cycle. This structure is designed to test a more intense intermittent fasting regimen, aiming to enhance physiological benefits by better aligning with circadian rhythms. The expectations include improved metabolic control, enhanced gastrointestinal motility, and reduced infection rates, with careful monitoring for reduced caloric intake risk. Consequently, the feeding rate is increased to meet daily caloric goals within the 18-hour timeframe, resulting in the most intensive feeding schedule among the three examined arms.

Timeline

Start date
2025-12-30
Primary completion
2026-11-30
Completion
2026-11-30
First posted
2025-12-08
Last updated
2025-12-08

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07270939. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.