by Aaron J.
Heffernan, C. Talekar, M. Henain, L. Purcell, M. Palmer and H. White
Critical Care volume 26,
Article number: 325 (2022)
Background
The enteral route is commonly utilised to support the
nutritional requirements of critically ill patients. However, there is paucity
of data guiding clinicians regarding the appropriate method of delivering the
prescribed dose. Continuous enteral feeding is commonly used; however, a bolus
or intermittent method of administration may provide several advantages such as
minimising interruptions. The purpose of this meta-analysis is to compare a
continuous versus an intermittent or bolus enteral nutrition administration
method.
Methods
A systematic review and meta-analysis were performed with
studies identified from the PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane Library and Web of Science
databases. Studies were included if they compared a continuous with either an
intermittent or bolus administration method of enteral nutrition in adult
patients admitted to the intensive care unit. Study quality was assessed using
the PEDro and Newcastle–Ottawa scoring systems. Review Manager was used for
performing the random-effects meta-analysis on the outcomes of mortality,
constipation, diarrhoea, increased gastric residuals, pneumonia, and bacterial
colonisation.
Results
A total of 5546 articles were identified, and 133 were
included for full text review. Fourteen were included in the final analysis.
There was an increased risk of constipation with patients receiving continuous
enteral nutrition (relative risk 2.24, 95% confidence interval 1.01–4.97, p = 0.05).
No difference was identified in other outcome measures. No appreciable bias was
identified.
Conclusion
The current meta-analysis has not identified any clinically
relevant difference in most outcome measures relevant to the care of critically
ill patients. However, there is a paucity of high-quality randomised controlled
clinical trials to guide this decision. Therefore, clinicians may consider
either dosing regimen in the context of the patient’s care requirements.
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