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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Active, not recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT00985205
Other study ID # RE-ENERGIZE
Secondary ID CIHR # 190808
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase Phase 3
First received
Last updated
Start date December 2010
Est. completion date December 2021

Study information

Verified date December 2021
Source Clinical Evaluation Research Unit at Kingston General Hospital
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to test the following hypotheses: 1. Enteral glutamine administration decreases in-hospital mortality in adult patients with severe thermal burn injuries. 2. Enteral glutamine administration decreases hospital-acquired blood stream infections from Gram negative organisms and length of stay in ICU and hospital for adult patients with severe thermal burn injuries. 3. Enteral glutamine administration will improve the physical function of surviving burn injured patients and reduce their cost of care. The objectives of this trial are to determine the overall treatment effect and safety of glutamine in burn patients. Specifically, the investigators want to assess the following outcomes in a sample of 1200 patients in 80 sites: 1. In patients with severe, life-threatening burn injury, what is the effect of enteral glutamine on time to discharge alive from hospital 2. In patients with severe, life-threatening burn injury, what is the effect of enteral glutamine on 6 month mortality, hospital-acquired blood stream infections from Gram negative organisms, hospital mortality, duration of stay in ICU and hospital, health-related quality of life, and health care resources?


Description:

Burn injuries represent a public health problem worldwide, ranked fourth in all injuries and are among the leading cause of disability adjusted life years in low and middle-income countries. More than in any other injury, the inflammation and catabolism associated with severe burns can exacerbate nutrient deficiencies, thereby predisposing patients to impaired immune function and increased risk of developing infectious complications, organ dysfunction, and death. Consequently, over the last few decades numerous trials have evaluated the impact of different nutrition/nutrient strategies in severe burns patients. Glutamine is of particular interest in this regard as it appears vital for a number of key stress-response pathways in serious illness. The existing randomized trials of glutamine supplementation in burns patients have suggested a significant reduction in mortality, infection, and hospital length of stay. However, in other critically ill patient populations, there is a signal of increased mortality associated with glutamine administration. Given this conflicting evidence, burn practitioners are either harming or saving lives with glutamine use. We hypothesize that the inexpensive therapeutic strategy tested in this multicenter randomized controlled clinical trial of supplemental enteral glutamine in 1200 severe burn injury patients will lead to lower morbidity and mortality and reduced health care costs in an otherwise very devastating and disabling injury worldwide. In our pilot study (Critical Care Medicine, 2003, 31:2444) we found a protective effect of glutamine against blood infection in severely burned adult patients. In addition, a significant decrease in mortality was observed with glutamine. These results should be tested with a multi-center trial because our study was small and did not have mortality as an end point. The specific aims of the study are to determine the overall treatment effect and safety of glutamine in burn patients. Clinical outcomes will be: mortality, time to discharge alive, incidence of acquired bacteremia due to Gram negative organisms, hospital mortality, duration of mechanical ventilation, ICU stay and hospital stay. The cost-effectiveness of glutamine administration will also be measured if the results show a decrease in length of care or a reduced incidence of acquired bacteremia due to Gram negative organisms with glutamine. The study will be a large, multicenter, double-blind, pragmatic, randomized controlled trial of 1200 patients with severe burns randomly allocated to receive enteral glutamine or placebo. Randomization will be concealed and stratified by site allocating patients 1:1 to either glutamine or matching placebo by the method of permuted blocks of random undisclosed size within strata. Patients will be adults, a minimum of 18 years old, with deep 2nd and/or 3rd degree burns requiring grafting, and for patients age 18 - 39 years a (Total Body Surface Area) TBSA burn ≥ 20% or in the presence of an inhalation injury a minimum of 15% TBSA burn is required; for patients age 40 - 59 years a TBSA burn ≥ 15% is required; for patients aged 60 years or older a TBSA burn ≥ 10% is required. The study will include approximately 80 burn centers in Canada, the US, Europe and Latin America. Patients will receive glutamine or a placebo through their feeding tube, every 4 hours or TID or QID if taking things by mouth, for a total of 0.5 g/kg/day for patients with a BMI <35. Patients with a BMI ≥35 will receive 0.5 g/kg/day based on an obesity-adjusted body weight. The study intervention will be administered until ≥7 days after the last successful grafting operation or until discharge from acute care unit or 3 months from admission, whichever comes first. Resuscitation, nutritional support, pain management, infection control and surgical care will be done according to standardized procedures. The Data will be collected and managed by a professional and centralized organization for multi centres clinical research (Clinical Evaluation Research Unit, Kingston, Ontario, Canada).


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Active, not recruiting
Enrollment 1201
Est. completion date December 2021
Est. primary completion date December 2021
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: 1. Deep 2nd and/or 3rd degree burns requiring grafting 2. Patient meets one of the following 4 criteria: 1. Patients 18 - 39 years of age with = 20% TBSA* burn 2. Patients 18 - 39 years of age with = 15% TBSA* burn and with inhalation injury 3. Patients 40 - 59 years of age with = 15% TBSA* burn 4. Patients = 60 years of age = 10% TBSA* *TBSA - Total Body Surface Area Exclusion Criteria: 1. > 72 hrs from admission to ICU to time of consent. 2. Patients younger than 18 years of age. 3. a) Patients without known renal disease and renal dysfunction defined as a serum creatinine >171 µmol/L or a urine output of less than 500 mL/last 24 hours (or 80 mL/last 4 hours if a 24 hour period of observation is not available). b) Patients with acute on chronic renal failure (pre-dialysis) with an absolute increase of >80 µmol/L from baseline or pre-admission creatinine or a urine output of <500 mL/last 24 hours (or 80 mL/last 4 hours). c) Patients with chronic renal failure on dialysis will be excluded. 4. Liver cirrhosis - Child-Pugh class C liver disease 5. Pregnant or lactating females. 6. Contra-indication for EN: intestinal occlusion or perforation, intra-abdominal injury. 7. Patients with injuries from high voltage electrical contact. 8. Patients who are moribund (not expected to survive the next 72 hours). 9. Patients with extreme body sizes: BMI < 18 or > 50 10. Enrollment in another industry sponsored ICU intervention study. 11. Received glutamine supplement for > 24 hrs prior to randomization 12. Known allergy to maltodextrin, corn starch, corn, corn products or glutamine.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Dietary Supplement:
Enteral Glutamine
0.5g/kg/day powdered glutamine to be mixed in with water and given via nasogastric or feeding tube q4 hrs or TID or QID if po.
Placebo
Maltodextrin mixed with water given via NG or feeding tube Q 4 hours or TID or QID if po.

Locations

Country Name City State
Austria Medical University of Graz Graz Styria
Belgium Ghent University Hospital Ghent
Belgium University Hospital of Liège Liège
Brazil The Hospital das Clínicas da Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de São Paulo São Paulo
Canada Foothills Medical Centre Calgary Alberta
Canada HHS/Hamilton Firefighters Burn Unit Hamilton Ontario
Canada CHUM/Centre des Grands Brules Montreal Quebec
Canada HEJ/Centre des Grands Brules Quebec
Canada Ross Tilley Burn Centre, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre Toronto Ontario
Dominican Republic Instituto Tecnologico de Santo Domingo Santo Domingo
Germany RWTH Aachen University Aachen North Rhine-Westphalia
Germany Berufsgenossenschaftliche Unfallklinik Ludwigshafen Ludwigshafen Rhein
Italy A.O.U. Citta della Salute e della Scienza di Torino Torino TO
Paraguay Centro Nacional de Quemaduras y Cirugia Reconstructiva Asunción
Singapore Singapore General Hospital Singapore
Spain Hospital Universitario La Fe Valencia
Sweden Uppsala University Hospital Uppsala
Thailand King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital Chulalongkorn University Bangkok Pathumwan
Thailand Siriraj Hospital, Divison of Trauma Surgery, Mahidol University Bangkok NOI
Thailand Khon Kaen University Mueang Nonthaburi
United Kingdom University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust Birmingham Edgbaston
United Kingdom St Helens & Knowsley Teaching Hospitals Liverpool England
United Kingdom Chelsea and Westminster Hospital London England
United Kingdom Pinderfields Hospital, Mid Yorkshire NHS Trust London West Yorkshire
United Kingdom Manchester University NHSFT Manchester London
United Kingdom Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals Newcastle Upon Tyne England
United States Akron's Children's Hospital, Paul & Carol David Foundation Akron Ohio
United States Joseph M Still Burn Center Augusta Georgia
United States Department of Anesthesiology, University of Colorado Aurora Colorado
United States Connecticut Burn Center Bridgeport Connecticut
United States The Ohio State University Wexnar Medical Center Columbus Ohio
United States University of Texas Southwestern Dallas Texas
United States JBSA Fort Sam Houston Fort Sam Houston Texas
United States Shands Burn Center at the University of Florida Gainesville Florida
United States University of Texas Medical Branch Galveston Texas
United States North Colorado Medical Center - Banner Health Greeley Colorado
United States Memorial Hermann/UTHSC Houston Texas
United States Department of Surgery University of Iowa Hospitals & Clinics Iowa City Iowa
United States CHI St.Elizabeth Regional Burn Center Lincoln Nebraska
United States Southern California Regional Burn Ctr at LAC & USC Med. Ctr. Los Angeles California
United States Firefighters' Regional Burn Center TN, University of Tennesse Health & Sciences Center Memphis Tennessee
United States Columbia-St. Mary's, Milwaukee, Wi Milwaukee Wisconsin
United States University of South Alabama Medical Center Mobile Alabama
United States The Nebraska Medical Center Omaha Nebraska
United States Arizona Burn Center at Maricopa Medical Center Phoenix Arizona
United States The Western Pennsylvania Hospital Burn Center Pittsburgh Pennsylvania
United States Legacy Emmanuel Hospital & Health Center Portland Oregon
United States Shriners Hospitals for Children Northern California Sacramento California
United States Mercy Hospital St. Louis Saint Louis Missouri
United States Harbourview Medical Center Seattle Washington
United States University of South Florida/Tampa Gen. Hosp. Reg. Burn Center, FL Tampa Florida
United States The Burn Center at Washington Hospital Center Washington District of Columbia
United States Wake Forest University Health Sciences Winston-Salem North Carolina

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Daren K. Heyland Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)

Countries where clinical trial is conducted

United States,  Austria,  Belgium,  Brazil,  Canada,  Dominican Republic,  Germany,  Italy,  Paraguay,  Singapore,  Spain,  Sweden,  Thailand,  United Kingdom, 

References & Publications (3)

Garrel D, Patenaude J, Nedelec B, Samson L, Dorais J, Champoux J, D'Elia M, Bernier J. Decreased mortality and infectious morbidity in adult burn patients given enteral glutamine supplements: a prospective, controlled, randomized clinical trial. Crit Care Med. 2003 Oct;31(10):2444-9. — View Citation

Peng X, Yan H, You Z, Wang P, Wang S. Effects of enteral supplementation with glutamine granules on intestinal mucosal barrier function in severe burned patients. Burns. 2004 Mar;30(2):135-9. — View Citation

Zhou YP, Jiang ZM, Sun YH, Wang XR, Ma EL, Wilmore D. The effect of supplemental enteral glutamine on plasma levels, gut function, and outcome in severe burns: a randomized, double-blind, controlled clinical trial. JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr. 2003 Jul-Aug;27(4):241-5. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Other Health-Related Quality of Life - in particular the physical function domain of the SF-36, ADL, and IADL questionnaires. 6 Month
Other Incidence of acquired bacteremia due to Gram negative organisms 3 Months
Other Hospital Mortality 3 Months
Other Duration of Mechanical Ventilation 3 months
Other ICU Stay 3 Months
Other Hospital Stay 3 Months
Primary Time to Discharge Alive 3 months
Secondary 6 Month Mortality 6 Months
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