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Meta-Analysis of Enteral Nutrition versus Total Parenteral Nutrition in Patients with Severe Acute Pancreatitis.

Authors :
Yunfei Cao
Yinglong Xu
Tingna Lu
Feng Gao
Zengnan Mo
Source :
Annals of Nutrition & Metabolism; Feb2009, Vol. 53 Issue 3/4, p268-275, 8p, 1 Diagram, 7 Charts
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Objective: To compare the safety of enteral nutrition and total parenteral nutrition in nutrition support of patients with severe acute pancreatitis. Methods: Data sources: Medline, Embase, and manual search. Study selection: 295 articles were screened for randomized controlled studies (RCTs) that compared enteral nutrition with total parenteral nutrition in patients with severe acute pancreatitis. Finally, six RCTs were identified and included in the meta-analysis. Data extraction: six RCTs with 224 participants were analyzed. The main outcome were infections, artificial nutrition-related complications, pancreatitis-related complications, non-pancreatitis-related complications, organ failure and mortality. The meta-analysis was performed with the fixed effects model or random effects model. Results: Compared with total parenteral nutrition, enteral nutrition was associated with a significantly lower risk of infections [odds ratio (OR) 0.236; 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 0.120–0.464, p < 0.001], pancreatitis-related complications (0.456; 0.234–0.888, p = 0.021), organ failure (0.334; 0.167–0.670, p = 0.002), multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (0.306; 0.128–0.736, p = 0.008), and mortality (0.251; 0.095–0.666, p = 0.005). There were no significant differences in artificial nutrition-related complications (0.642; 0.354–1.162, p = 0.143), and non-pancreatitis-related complications (0.716; 0.325–1.576, p = 0.406) between the two groups. Conclusions: Enteral nutrition appears safer than total parenteral nutrition in nutrition support of patients with severe acute pancreatitis. Copyright © 2009 S. Karger AG, Basel [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02506807
Volume :
53
Issue :
3/4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Annals of Nutrition & Metabolism
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36593378
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000189382