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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02306746
Other study ID # ANZIC-RC/MC001
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase Phase 3
First received
Last updated
Start date June 16, 2016
Est. completion date August 1, 2018

Study information

Verified date September 2018
Source Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Research Centre
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Nutrition therapy is an essential standard of care for all critically ill patients who are mechanically ventilated and remain in the intensive care unit for more than a few days.

The investigators plan to conduct a 4,000 patient, double-blind, randomised controlled trial to determine if augmentation of calorie delivery using energy dense enteral nutrition in mechanically ventilated patients improves 90 day survival when compared to routine care.


Description:

Each year around 130,000 Australians are admitted to ICU at a daily cost of approximately $4000 per patient. Their care consumes close to 3 billion dollars per year. These critically ill patients are the sickest in the hospital. They require substantial resources and multiple interventions. Some die and many of those who survive have delayed and compromised functional recovery which can persist for months or years.

Nutrition therapy is an essential standard of care for all ICU patients who are mechanically ventilated and remain in ICU for more than a few days. Enteral nutrition (via a nasogastric tube) is usually initiated within 24 hours of ICU admission with a formula containing 1 kcal/ml and prescribed at an approximate rate of 1 ml/kg/hour. However, standard enteral nutrition practice typically results in the delivery of only ~60% of the full-recommended calorie requirement.

Although prescribed calories can reliably be delivered using the intravenous route, the enteral route is preferred for a number of reasons and is recommended by all nutrition guidelines as first-line therapy. In particular, enteral nutrition is more physiological, less costly and associated with fewer infective complications. Delivery of nutrient into the gut also has beneficial effects on subsequent gut function and may reduce ongoing sepsis which can be fuelled by the movement of gut flora through a permeable mucosa that has not been exposed to nutrient. Intravenous nutrition is accordingly, generally used only when enteral feeding is impossible, or persistently limited. Although supplementing enteral with intravenous nutrition can increase calorie delivery, this has not been shown to have a therapeutic benefit and may worsen important clinical outcomes. This may be because adverse effects associated with intravenous nutrition counteract the benefits of increased calorie delivery.

Previous trials support the concept that optimising nutrition in the critically ill will improve outcome, however, the evidence is limited, inclusive and generally of low quality. It is extraordinary that there is not better (Level I) evidence to inform nutrition management in critically ill patients given the frequency of the intervention, the biologic rationale, the high mortality following ICU admission, the frequency of muscle wasting and the poor functional outcomes in survivors. This is especially true given the low cost of enteral nutrition (~$23/day).

The investigators recently completed pilot study clearly achieved all the key criteria which, for a pharmaceutical product, would lead to a phase III trial, namely: 1. feasibility; 2. safety; 3. separation; 4. excellent recruitment rate; 5. successful blinding; 6. a signal for benefit.

A definitive study must now be done to establish whether 90-day survival and functional outcomes following critical illness may be improved by increased calorie delivery.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 4000
Est. completion date August 1, 2018
Est. primary completion date July 10, 2018
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Intubated and receiving mechanical ventilation

- About to commence enteral nutrition or enteral nutrition commenced within the previous12 hours

- Expected to be receiving enteral nutrition in ICU until at least the day after tomorrow

Exclusion Criteria:

- Any Enteral Nutrition (EN) or Parenteral Nutrition (PN) received for >12 hours in this ICU admission

- Treating clinician considers the EN goal rate (i.e.1ml/kg of ideal body weight per hour) to be clinically contraindicated e.g. requirement for fluid restriction

- Requirement for specific nutritional therapy as determined by the treating doctor or dietitian i.e. TARGET protocol EN not considered to be in the best interest of the patient

- Death is deemed to be imminent or inevitable during this admission and either the attending physician, patient or substitute decision maker is not committed to active treatment

- The patient has an underlying disease that makes survival to 90 days unlikely

- = 15% burns

- Previously enrolled in this study

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Dietary Supplement:
TARGET protocol EN 1.5 kcal/mL
Enteral feed 1.5 kcal/mL
TARGET protocol EN 1.0 kcal/mL
Enteral feed 1.0 kcal/mL

Locations

Country Name City State
Australia Lyell McEwin Adelaide South Australia
Australia Queen Elizabeth Hospital Adelaide South Australia
Australia Royal Adelaide Hosptial Adelaide South Australia
Australia Bendigo Hospital Bendigo Victoria
Australia Logan Hospital Brisbane Queensland
Australia Princess Alexandra Hospital Brisbane Queensland
Australia Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Brisbane Queensland
Australia Bunbury Hospital Bunbury Western Australia
Australia Canberra Hospital Canberra Australian Capital Territory
Australia Footscray Hospital Footscray Victoria
Australia Frankston Hosptial Frankston Victoria
Australia University Hosptial Geelong Geelong Victoria
Australia Gosford Hospital Gosford New South Wales
Australia Austin Hospital Heidelberg Victoria
Australia Royal Hobart Hospital Hobart Tasmania
Australia Launceston General Hospital Launceston Tasmania
Australia Monash Health Dandenong Hospital Melbourne Victoria
Australia Royal Melbourne Hospital Melbourne Victoria
Australia St Vincent's Hospital Melbourne Melbourne Victoria
Australia Sunshine Hospital Melbourne Victoria
Australia Fiona Stanley Hospital Perth Western Australia
Australia Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital Perth Western Australia
Australia St John of God Hospital Murdoch Perth Western Australia
Australia Blacktown Hospital Sydney New South Wales
Australia Concord Hospital Sydney New South Wales
Australia Liverpool Hospital Sydney New South Wales
Australia Nepean Hospital Sydney New South Wales
Australia Royal North Shore Hosptial Sydney New South Wales
Australia Royal Prince Alfred Hospital Sydney New South Wales
Australia St George Hospital Sydney New South Wales
Australia St Vincent's Hospital Sydney Sydney New South Wales
Australia Sydney Adventist Hospital Sydney New South Wales
Australia Westmead Hospital Sydney New South Wales
Australia Toowoomba Hospital Toowoomba Queensland
New Zealand Auckland City Hospital Cardiovascular Intensive Care Unit Auckland
New Zealand Auckland City Hospital Department of Critical Care Medicine Auckland
New Zealand Middlemore Hospital Auckland
New Zealand North Shore Hospital Auckland
New Zealand Christchurch Hospital Christchurch
New Zealand Waikato Hospital Hamilton
New Zealand Hawkes Bay Fallen Soldiers Memorial Hospital Hastings
New Zealand Hutt Valley Hospital Lower Hutt
New Zealand Nelson Hospital Nelson
New Zealand Rotorua Hospital Rotorua
New Zealand Tauranga Hospital Tauranga
New Zealand Wellington Regional Hospital Wellington

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Research Centre

Countries where clinical trial is conducted

Australia,  New Zealand, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary All cause mortality Mortality status Day 90
Secondary Mortality Mortality status At hospital discharge an average of 28 days
Secondary Mortality Mortality status Day 28
Secondary Time from randomisation until death Mortality status Day 180
Secondary Number of days alive and not in ICU Mortality status Day 28
Secondary Number of days alive and not in hospital Mortality status Day 28
Secondary Ventilator free days Organ support status Day 28
Secondary Proportion of patients receiving vasopressor support Organ support proportion Day 28
Secondary Vasopressor free days Organ support status Day 28
Secondary Proportion of patients receiving any renal replacement therapy Organ support proportion Day 28
Secondary Renal replacement therapy free days Organ support status Day 28
Secondary Proportion of patients with positive blood cultures Blood stream infection proportion Day 28
Secondary Proportion of patients requiring intravenous antimicrobials Patients requiring intravenous antimicrobials Day 28
Secondary Mortality Mortality status Day 180
Secondary Quality of life assessment European Quality of Life 5 Dimensions Day 180
Secondary Functional outcomes for patients under 65 years in the work force Questions from the Australian Labour Force Survey Day 180
Secondary Functional outcomes for patients under 65 years and not in the work force and patients 65 years and over living dependently World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0 Day 180
Secondary Functional outcomes for patients 65 years and over living independently Adelaide Activities Profile Day 180
Secondary Cause-specific mortality Mortality status Day 90
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