by Tweel, Lauren
E.; Compher, Charlene; Bear, Danielle E.; Gutierrez-Castrellon, Pedro; Leaver,
Susannah K.; MacEachern, Kristen; Ortiz-Reyes, Luis; Pooja, Lakhani; León,
Angélica; Wedemire, Courtney; Lee, Zheng Yii; Day, Andrew G.; Heyland, Daren K.
Critical Care Medicine, November 06, 2023.
Objectives:
Across guidelines,
protein dosing for critically ill patients with obesity varies considerably.
The objective of this analysis was to evaluate whether this population would
benefit from higher doses of protein.
Design:
A post hoc subgroup
analysis of the effect of higher protein dosing in critically ill patients with
high nutritional risk (EFFORT Protein): an international, multicenter,
pragmatic, registry-based randomized trial.
Setting:
Eighty-five adult
ICUs across 16 countries.
Patients:
Patients with
obesity defined as a body mass index (BMI) greater than or equal to 30 kg/m2 (n =
425).
Interventions:
In the primary
study, patients were randomized into a high-dose (≥ 2.2 g/kg/d) or usual-dose
protein group (≤ 1.2 g/kg/d).
Measurements and
Main Results:
Protein intake was
monitored for up to 28 days, and outcomes (time to discharge alive [TTDA], 60-d
mortality, days of mechanical ventilation [MV], hospital, and ICU length of
stay [LOS]) were recorded until 60 days post-randomization. Of the 1301 patients
in the primary study, 425 had a BMI greater than or equal to 30 kg/m2. After
adjusting for sites and covariates, we observed a nonsignificant slower rate of
TTDA with higher protein that ruled out a clinically important benefit (hazard
ratio, 0.78; 95% CI, 0.58–1.05; p = 0.10). We found no evidence of
difference in TTDA between protein groups when subgroups with different classes
of obesity or patients with and without various nutritional and frailty risk
variables were examined, even after the removal of patients with baseline acute
kidney injury. Overall, 60-day mortality rates were 31.5% and 28.2% in the high
protein and usual protein groups, respectively (risk difference, 3.3%; 95% CI,
–5.4 to 12.1; p = 0.46). Duration of MV and LOS in hospital and ICU were
not significantly different between groups.
Conclusions:
In critically ill
patients with obesity, higher protein doses did not improve clinical outcomes,
including those with higher nutritional and frailty risk.
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