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Transcript
QUALITY IMPROVEMENT
INITIATIVE
Nutrition in Pediatric
Cardiac Intensive Care
María Balestrini, MD
Pediatric Cardiac Intensive Care Unit
Pediatric Hospital J. P. Garrahan
Buenos Aires
Argentina
PCICU – PEDIATRIC HOSPITAL J. P. GARRAHAN
21 BEDS, 2 EXCLUSIVE OPERATING ROOMS, 5 SENIOR SURGEONS,
CARDIOLOGISTS AND PEDIATRIC CARDIAC INTENSIVISTS
PCICU - HOSPITAL GARRAHAN
New patients admitted for
surgery 2014
563
Total assignable RACHS-1
patients
514
Neonatal surgeries
67
By pass
Mortality rate
Other programs
85%
5%
ECMO, Chronic
ventricular support and
heart transplant
PILLARS OF NUTRITIONAL
SUPPORT IN THIS PERIOD
• Preserve the function of vital organs,
minimizing the loss of lean body mass,
although it can not completely prevent
catabolism.
• Achieve positive nitrogen balance, which is
crucial to growth
• Avoid over feeding, leading to CO2
retention, difficulty in weaning ventilator
and impaired immune function.
METABOLIC CHANGES IN THE
IMMEDIATE POST SURGICAL
• Limited glycogen storage
• Cytokine mobilization
• Mobilization of amino
acids for gluconeogenesis
METABOLIC
RESPONSE TO
STRESS
INCREASED
METABOLIC RATE
• More important in
neonates
• Returns to baseline
values between 12 and
24 hours
• Generalized edema
• Capillaritis (capillary
leak syndrome)
• Multiorgan failure.
INCREASED
INFLAMMATORY
RESPONSE
NUTRITIONAL SUPPORT
PROGRAM DEVELOPEMENT
• Discuss common feeding issues in
patients with complex congenital
heart disease
• We reviewed previous practices and
made a new feeding protocol
• We examined preliminary data
after the initiation of the new
protocol at Garrahan Hospital.
FAILURE OF GROWTH
Common among infants with complex CHD:
• Inefficient circulation
• High metabolic demand during post-operative
healing
• Alterations in growth factors and growth
hormone
• Genetic syndromes
• Poor oral skills
• Gastrointestinal pathology
• Associated with worse outcomes in CHD
patients
PERIOPERATIVE FEEDING
CONSIDERATIONS
Preoperatively
• Cyanosis and
compromised
systemic output
• Cardiac disease
Prostaglandin (PGE)
dependent
• Need of Umbilical
Catheters
Postoperatively
• Clinical weakness
• High respiratory
support
• Inotropic support
• Poor oral skills
• Gastric dysmotility
• Vocal cord paralysis
PREOPERATIVE FEEDING IN PGE
DEPENDENT PATIENTS
• No increased risk of necrotizing
enterocolitis (NEC) with early feeding
in hemodynamically stable, cyanotic
infants
• No increase in adverse events with
enteral feeding
• No increased risk of NEC with umbilical
artery catheters
BENEFITS OF EARLY
ENTERAL FEEDING
• Improved nutritional status and growth
prior to surgery
• Improved surgical outcome
• Enhanced intestinal maturation
• Improved feeding tolerance postoperatively
• Decreased length of parental nutrition
• Increased immunity
CONSENSUS FEEDING GUIDELINE
National Pediatric Cardiology Quality
Improvement Collaborative
• Created in 2009 to improve outcomes
among single ventricle patients
• Multidisciplinary Feeding Work Group
• Devised first consensus feeding guidelines
for single ventricle infants
• Released guidelines in 2011
OUR FEEDING GUIDELINES
Previous guidelines
• No recommendations on timing of pre or postoperative feed initiation
• Post-operative feeds started continuously at
2 ml/hr
• Increased by 1 ml/hr every 6 hours
• Once at goal volume, caloric density slowly
increased
• Once at goal calories, progression to bolus
schedule
OUR FEEDING GUIDELINES
Previous guidelines
• Parenteral nutrition was not initiated
within 24 hours of surgery
• Parenteral nutrition had significant deficit
of nutrients
• We invited a multidisciplinary committee
to revise feeding guidelines
• New protocol implemented in January 2013
NEW FEEDING GUIDELINES
Focus of new guidelines
• Early initiation of enteral feeds pre and postoperatively
• Oral feeding and breast feeding when possible
• Vocal cord paralysis assessment after aortic arch
interventions
• Nasogastric tube bolus as preferred
postoperative enteral feeding choice
• Rapid full protein-caloric requirements
achievement
• A standard parenteral nutrition formula for
infants with congenital heart disease was
developed.
IMPLEMENTATION OF NUTRITIONAL SUPPORT
IN THE IMMEDIATE POSTOPERATIVE PERIOD
Day 1
Standard Total
Parenteral
Nutrition
Day 2-3
Standard Total
Parenteral
Nutrition+Start
enteral feeding
Onwards
Decrease in Total
Parenteral Nutrition
and progression of
enteral feeding
PARENTERAL NUTRITIONAL
SUPPORT
• Volume: 60
ml/kg/day
• Glucose flow:
7mg/kg /min
• Amino acids: 3
g/kg/day
• Lipids: 3 g/kg/day
• Preparation 2 in 1
• Central Line
• Provides: 1 kcal/ml
• Calories: 55-60
Kcal / kg / day
• Goal Calories: 90 –
100 Kcal/kg/day
• Increase volumen
• Glucose Peak flow
10 mg/kg/min
• Check glycosuria
• Suspend the TPN
only if managed to
obtain 75% of the
total calories by
enteral feeding
ENTERAL NUTRITION SUPPORT
Trophic
mode
feeding
Nasogastric
tube (NG)
20-30
ml/Kg/day
Feeding
mode
- NG
- Oral
- Bolus
- Continuous
enteral
feeding
Feeding
options
Volume and
Calories
Goal
- Human milk
preferred
- Volume
- Standard
formula
100-140
ml/Kg/d
- Hydrolyzed
formula
- Calories
120- 150
Kcal/kg/d
NUTRITIONAL SUPPORT PROGRAM
IMPACT EVALUATION
• We conducted a prospective clinical study
from 1 January 2013 to 31 December 2014
• Less than 3 months perioperative patients,
were included.
CLINICAL STUDY
Hospital
Discharge
7th day
72hs
Initial evaluation
Clinical,
Anthropometric
Laboratory,
Feeding
Clinical,
Laboratory,
Feeding.
Clínical,
Laboratory,
Feeding
Clinical,
Anthropometric
Laboratory,
Feeding
REE
Anthropometric: Weight, height, head circumference. (mean and SD)
Laboratory: Glucose, albumin, total and ionized calcium, total magnesium,
phosphorus, electrolytes, triglycerides
Resting energy expenditure (REE) assessment: using Schoffield and WHO
equations.
Feeding characteristics: volume, formula, calories, proteins, lipids; enteral and
parenteral
CLINICAL STUDY
• N 70 patients
• Female 55%
• Median age 17 days
•
•
•
•
•
(r1-120).
95% neonates
All term infants
Median weight 3,2 Kg
(r1,9-5)
LOS 13 day (r1-160)
Survival 93%
• Diagnoses assignable
RACHS-1 patients
RACHS- 1
%
2
14,3
3
34,2
4
43
6
8,5
CLINICAL STUDY
Initial
evaluation
72 hs
70 Patients
68 patients
2 deaths
64 PATIENTS
COMPLETED THE STUDY
7th
Day
5 deaths - 9
early Discharge
Hospital
Discharge
PREOPERATIVE
Schoffield
WHO
TPN
MEDIAN
STANDARD
DEVIATION
VOLUME
ML/KG
78,2
± 21
CALORIES
KCAL/KG
59
± 10
ENTERAL
MEDIAN
STANDARD
DESVIATION
VOLUME
ML/KG
77
± 43
CALORIES
KCAL/KG
62
± 38
% REE
MEDIAN
162
163
SD
±86
±78
POST
OPERATIVE
72 HS
•The sum of enteral and
parenteral gives 66 kcal/
kg/day (r 27 -117)
•70% arrived at suggested
target
TPN 55%
MEDIAN
RANGE
VOLUME
ML/KG
55
30-80
CALORIES
KCAL/KG
60
30-76
ENTERAL
49%
MEDIAN
RANGE
VOLUME
ML/KG
60
20-140
CALORIES
KCAL/KG
50
10- 117
% REE
MEDIAN
Schoffield
WHO
127.7
137
RANGE/SD
41-328
±51
DISCHARGE
• 78% discharge with oral
feeding,
• 22% by nasogastric tube.
• 13 patients with exclusive
breast feeding
• 9 patients combined breast
feeding and formula
• 42 patients formula
ENTERAL
VOLUME
ML/KG
CALORIES
KCAL/KG
MEDIAN RANGE
140
60-160
120
40-148.5
WEIGHT (kg)
MEDIAN
SD
ADMISSION
3,32
± 0,68
DISCHARGE
3,5
± 0,78
CONCLUSION
• Cardiovascular TPN standard was safely
implemented.
• Parenteral and enteral nutrition, alone or in
combination exceeded REE requeriments,
during perioperative course in all patients.
• There were no patients with NEC
• There was an increase in weight. Head
circumference and height remained stable.
SUMMARY
• Nutrition is a major focus in improving the
outcome of children with complex CHD
• Early pre-operative enteral feeding in this
patient population is safe.
• Standardized approach in nutritional support is
likely to improve outcomes in patients with
congenital heart surgery, specially neonates and
small infants.
THANK YOU VERY MUCH