4.7 Article

Early enteral gut feeding with conditionally indispensable pharmaconutrients is metabolically safe and is well tolerated in postoperative cancer patients - a pilot study

Journal

CLINICAL NUTRITION
Volume 23, Issue 5, Pages 1193-1198

Publisher

CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
DOI: 10.1016/j.clnu.2004.03.010

Keywords

major gastrointestianl surgery; gut feeding; pharmaconutrition; safety and tolerance; glutamine; antioxidants

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Background & aims: Postoperative early enteral gut feeding with conditionally indispensable pharmaconutrients can contribute to minimize trauma-induced gut damage. Aim of this pilot study was the evaluation of metabolic effects and gastrointestinal tolerance of a new enteral supplement. Methods: In a prospective open clinical trial, 20 cancer patients received the test supplement containing glutamine (as dipeptides), antioxidative (pro-)vitamins (C, E, beta-carotene), maltodextrine, tributyrine, sodium, zinc, and selenium within 2-3 h after elective gastrointestinal surgery continuously via jejunostomy tube for 3 postoperative days (500 ml/day). From postoperative day 3-5, additional enteral nutrition (1500 kcal/ 6270 kJ/day) was given. Metabolic effects (substrate monitoring, hematology, liver/kidney parameters) and tolerance (nausea, vomiting, flatulence, constipation, diarrhea) was assessed through the study. Results: Gastrointestinal tolerance of the supplement was excellent: no adverse events related to the product were documented. Significantly increased mean plasma levels (day 3 vs. day 1) of vitamin C (13.0+/-7.3 vs. 62.8+/-29.7 mumol/l), vitamin E (13.5+/-6.6 vs. 20.8+/-9.2 mumol/l), zinc (5.6+/-1.9 vs. 8.6+/-2.3 mumot/l) and selenium (35.0+/-19.6 vs. 42.9+/-0.9 mug/l) as well as enhanced plasma glutamine levels (429.6+/-90.6 vs. 530+/-200.1 mumol/l) reflected an effective absorption of substrates supplied. Adverse effects on organ functions and hematology were not observed. Conclusions: Early postoperative gut feeding with the newly developed enteral supplement shows no adverse effects, is welt tolerated in cancer patients and provides a novel method to deliver conditionally indispensable pharmaconutrients. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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