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Does Volume-based Enteral Feeding Improve Nutrient Delivery in Hospitalized Critically Ill Children?
Sponsor: University of Calgary
Summary
Background Some critically ill children have malnutrition which may worsen while they are in hospital and delay their return home. They can recover faster when they are given tube feedings to improve their nutrition. Unfortunately, in the hospital these feedings are often interrupted and so these children do not get all the nutrition they need. The usual procedure is to set hourly rates for the tube feedings and to accept that they get less when feedings are interrupted. The researchers would like to test if children are fed better if the bedside nurses were to check the volume provided through the day and then ensure the child gets closer to the prescribed volumes. Aim To determine the feasibility of performing a Randomized Control Trial assessing the use of a Volume-based feeding algorithm in critically ill children admitted to the Alberta Children's Hospital Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU). Objectives 1. Obtain information to inform sample size calculations for nutrition and clinical outcomes for a larger RCT: energy adequacy and protein adequacy, feed tolerance, infections, changes in anthropometric measurements at transitions of care, 28-day ventilator free days, length of stay, 60-day mortality, and 60-day hospital readmission? 2. Assess adherence of medical staff to the study protocol 3. Evaluate the timing of study enrollment and participant allocation 4. Evaluate the proposed deferred consent strategy. Methods The researchers will conduct a randomized control feasibility trial of critically ill children admitted to the Alberta Children's Hospital (ACH) Pediatric Intensive Care unit who require tube feedings. Children will be randomly assigned to the intervention arm (Volume-based algorithm) or the comparison arm (rate-based algorithm). Significance The proposed study will provide evidence of whether a novel approach to feeding critically ill children is feasible during PICU admission. This trial will inform a larger Randomized Control Trial on this topic that will assess if using a Volume-based feeding algorithm will improve outcomes of clinical importance including energy adequacy, protein adequacy, feed tolerance, infections, changes in anthropometric measurements at transitions of care, 28-day ventilator free days, length of stay in PICU and hospital, 60-day mortality, and 60-day hospital readmission.
Official title: Does Volume-based Enteral Feeding Improve Nutrient Delivery in Hospitalized Critically Ill Children? a Randomized Feasibility Trial of Volume Versus Rate-based Enteral Nutrition Algorithms.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
1 Month - 18 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
20
Start Date
2024-03-20
Completion Date
2025-12
Last Updated
2025-03-30
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Volume-based EN
Bedside nurses will receive a total daily feed volume prescription to be administered to the participant over a 24-hour period. The bedside nurse will calculate the initial hourly rate by dividing the total daily feed goal by 24 hours at approximately 0700 hours. In this intervention group, they will be instructed to titrate the rate of feeds to accommodate for any feeding interruptions as follows: When feeds are held for \> 1 hour, the remaining daily feed volume will be divided by the remaining number of hours. A maximum infusion rate will be set at 2 times the patient's baseline 24-hour feed rate to ensure that a large bolus volume of feed is not administered over a too short period of time.
Rate-based EN
Bedside nurses will receive an hourly feed rate prescription to administer the tube feedings over a 24-hour period. If feeds are held, they will be restarted at the same consistent hourly rate that was previously ordered. Nurses will not adjust feed rates to compensate for feed interruptions
Locations (1)
Alberta Children's Hospital
Calgary, Alberta, Canada