Title: Parenteral Nutrition An Overview for the Practising Clinician
1Parenteral Nutrition An Overview for the
Practising Clinician
63rd BAMP / UWI CME Conference 16th May 2008 St.
Michael, Barbados
- David Armstrong,
- Division of GastroenterologyMcMaster University
Hamilton Health SciencesHamilton, Ontario,
Canada
2McMaster University Medical Centre
3McMaster University Medical Centre
4Parenteral Nutrition - Overview
- Indications, Contraindications and Routes of
Administration - Macronutrient and Micronutrient Use in TPN
- Importance of a Parenteral Nutrition Team
5- Death from starvation is as final as death from
cardiac standstill!
6Starvation
- Adult volunteers
- Fasted for 30-40 days 25 weight loss
- More prolonged fasting 50 weight loss
- Weakness
- Apathy
- Reduced work capacity cardiorespiratory failure
- Total starvation is fatal in 8 to 12 weeks
- IRA Fast (5/91-8/91) death at 45 days (1/10 -
with gunshot) and 57-73 days (9/10)
7What is Nutritional Support?
- The provision of nutrients orally, enterally or
parenterally with therapeutic intent. - This includes, but is not limited to, provision
of total enteral or parenteral nutrition support,
and provision of therapeutic nutrients to
maintain and /or restore optimal nutrition status
and health. - ASPEN, 2002
8Who Should Get Nutritional Support?
- Patients who
- Cannot meet nutrient requirements
- Have documented inadequate oral intake
- Have unpredictable return of GI function
- Need a prolonged period of NPO/bowel rest
9Enteral (GI Tract) versus Parenteral (IV)
Nutrition
- Not a flip of the coin decision
- If the gut works, use it!
10Parenteral Nutrition
Magic!
- 23-year old female with Crohns disease
- Obstruction and perforation ICU post-op
- NPO for 3 weeks, sepsis, weight loss 30 lb
- Does she need TPN, Sir? Yes, Armstrong!
- How do we give TPN?
- What should we give and how much?
- What do we need to monitor?
- Who can help us with this?
- Youll have to read it up, Im afraid Ive
never done this and I dont know anyone who has!
11Common Indications for PN
- Inability to absorb adequate nutrients via the GI
tract - Massive small-bowel resection / short bowel
syndrome - Severe, untreatable steatorrhea / diarrhoea /
malabsorption - Complete bowel obstruction, or intestinal
pseudo-obstruction - Prolonged acute abdomen or ileus
- Severe catabolism GI tract unusable within 57
days - Enteral access not feasible, not adequate or not
tolerated - Pancreatitis with intolerance (eg pain) of
jejunal nutrition - High output EC fistula (gt500 mL) no distal
enteral access
12Potential Indications for PN
- Enterocutaneous fistula
- IBD unresponsive to medical therapy
- Hyperemesis gravidarum persistent for gt 57
days and enteral nutrition not possible - Partial small bowel obstruction
- Intensive chemotherapy / severe mucositis
- Major surgery if enteral nutrition unlikely for
gt710 days - Intractable vomiting if jejunal feeding not
possible - Chylous ascites or chylothorax when low
13Contra-indications to PN
- Functioning gastrointestinal tract
- Treatment anticipated for lt 5 days in patients
without severe malnutrition - Inability to obtain venous access
- Poor prognosis that does not warrant aggressive
nutrition support - When the risks of PN are judged to exceed the
potential benefits
14Who Needs PN?Assessing Nutritional Status
- Focused nutrition history
- Assess current weight and weight-loss history
- Physical examination
- Assess malabsorption
- Fecal fat test
- Schilling test
- Hydrogen breath test
- D-xylose
- SGA Subjective Global Assessment
Bashir S, et al. Prim Care 200128629-645.
15Assessing Nutritional StatusThe SGA
- A. History
- Weight change lt5 small510 potentially
significant gt10 definitely significant - Change in dietary intake
- Gastrointestinal symptoms(nausea, vomiting,
diarrhea, anorexia) - Functional capacity
- Disease and its relation to nutritional
requirements
- B. Physical
- Loss of subcutaneous fat
- Muscle wasting
- Ankle edema
- Sacral edema
- Ascites
- C. SGA Rating
- A Well nourished
- B Moderately malnourished
- C Severely malnourished
Detsky AS et al. JPEN 1987118-13.
16How Do We Give PN?
17Administration of PN
- PN solutions are hypertonic
- Infusion, therefore, via
- Central venous catheter, or
- Peripheral venous catheter with reduced
osmolarity
18Percutaneous CentralVenous Access
- Peripherally inserted central catheters PICC
- Placed at bedside or radiologically
- Subclavian vein used to be most common
- Can be placed removed at bedside, but
- Generally, placed radiologically
- Confirm placement with chest x-ray
- Can change over a wire to replace
19Implanted Central Venous Catheters (e.g. Hickman,
Groshong, Port-A-Cath)
- For prolonged TPN
- Also for fluids, chemotherapy, blood draws
- Catheter inserted operatively
- Placed with fluoroscopic guidance
- Implanted into a subcutaneous tunnel
20Peripherally Inserted Central Catheter (P.I.C.C.)
Line
- More expensive than peripheral lines
- More difficult to place
- Last up to 6 - 12 months
- Restrict arm movement
- Allow higher osmolarity Central TPN
solutions
21Tunnelled (Hickman) Line
22Implanted Venous Access Device
23Peripheral IV short-line
- PROS
- Least expensive
- Easily placed and removed
- Lowest risk for CRI
- Beneficial for short-term support (lt 1 week)
- CONS
- Need to change often
- Every 48-72h
- Phlebitis and vein injury
- Only one lumen
- Limits energy delivery
- Volume
- Osmolality (600-900 mOsm/l)
- pH restriction (pH 5-9)
24Peripheral IV mid-line
- PROS
- May be used for a longer duration than peripheral
- Ease of placement compared to central lines
- Allows access to larger vessel
- CONS
- Not a central line
- Must follow guidelines for peripheral lines for
concentration, pH and infusion rates
25Central IV PICC
- PROS
- Can infuse solutionsgt 900 mOsmol/l
- May be placed by RN
- Decreased CRI vs other central lines HPN
- Can be multi-lumen
- Usable for CT contrast
- CONS
- Shorter life than other central lines (lt 12 m)
- More difficult self care
- Blood sampling not always possible
- More frequent flushing and maintenance
- More painful
26Central IV Hickman / Brovac
- PROS
- Can infuse solutionsgt 900 mOsmol/l
- Allow full IV nutritional support
- Can be multi-lumen
- Longevity 1 -3 years
- Easier self-care (than PICC , possibly, port)
- CONS
- Surgical / Radiological procedure
- More complex
- More difficult to remove
- Tube protruding from chest may affect body image
- More restrictive than a port
27Central IV Implantable Port
- PROS
- Can infuse solutionsgt 900 mOsmol/l
- Allow full IV nutritional support
- Greatest longevity
- Easier self-care (only needed if accessed)
- Improved body image activity
- CONS
- Surgical / Radiological procedure
- More complex
- More difficult to remove
- Access requires placement of a Huber needle
- Infection risk during access
28Complications of PN
- Infectious
- e.g. Catheter and systemic infections
- Mechanical
- e.g. Catheter obstruction, Hydrothorax,
Venous thrombosis - Metabolic
- e.g. Bone disease, Hepatobiliary disease,
Renal disease
29Complications of PN Catheters
- Catheter infections
- Catheter occlusion
- Catheter injury/leakage
- Catheter migration
- Venous thrombosis
- Catateher line true story!
30Venous Access Line Blockage
- Check hub / line integrity / phlebotomy
- Careful flushing
- Doppler study Linogram
- Lipid - 70 EtOH
- Calcium / mineral - HCl (0.1 N)
- Thrombus - (Urokinase - 5000U) or tPa
- Prophylaxis - flushing after cap-off
31Catheter-related infections
- Skin commensals (S. epidermidis, S. aureus,
Candida spp) Intestinal flora (Ps spp, Candida) - Monitor temp (blood culture if gt38.5oC)
- Culture - central and peripheral - 51 CFU ratio
implicates central line (Vanhuynegem, 1988,
Surgery) - 2/3 can be cleared by antibiotics and local care
(Benezra, 1988, Am J Med) - Antibiotic lock - 4d Rx 10d 12-h lock (90
clear)
32Risk Factors for Infection
- Site - Subclavian lt Int. jugular lt Femoral
- Material - Silastic / Polyurethane lt PVC
- Type - Subclavian (0.9) lt PICC (1.4 / 1000d)
- Single lumen lt Multi-lumen - Care - 2 chlorhexidine (5.9 catheter
colonisation) 70 isopropyl alcohol
(15.6) 10 povidone iodine (19.5) - Patient - young, poor technique, smoking,
Crohns, jejunostomy, thrombosis, narcotics
33Parenteral Nutrition - Overview
- Indications, Contraindications and Routes of
Administration - Macronutrient and Micronutrient Use in TPN
- Importance of a Parenteral Nutrition Team
34Designing Parenteral Regimens
- Assess nutritional status and set goals.
- Evaluate constraints on nutrient delivery.
- Assess fluid, electrolyte, vitamin, trace element
requirements - Order nutrients (protein, CHO, fat), fluids/
electrolytes/ trace elements - Determine administration (rate and duration).
- Avoid metabolic complications.
http//www.globalrph.com/tpn.htm
35Parenteral Nutrition
- Carbohydrate (10 - 25 Dextrose)
- Amino Acids (0.8 to 1.2 g /kg)
- Lipid Emulsion, incl E.F.A. (10 - 30)
- Vitamins / Minerals / Trace Elements
- Electrolytes
- Fluid (2 - 3 litres /day)
36How Much Should We Give?
37Nutritional AssessmentThe Eggs-Benedict
Equation (EBE)
A-Asparagus B- Bacon C-Cholesterol
E.B.E. 0.43A 1.56B 4.57C
38Nutritional Assessment
- Dietary Intake Assessment (3-day recall)
- Weight Weight loss (v. IBW / UBW)
- Harris-Benedict Equation Stress factor
- Blood tests CBC, Albumin, Electrolytes, Vitamins
A, B12, D E, Fe, Ca, Mg - (Indirect Calorimetry)
- (Anthropometry)
- (Nitrogen Balance)
39Estimate of Requirements
- Most hospitalized patients will require 30
kcals/kg/d - CHO can utilise dextrose up to 5 mg/kg/min
- Protein The average patient requires 0.8 2.0
g protein/kg usual body weight
40Constraints on Nutrient Delivery
- Do not overload bodys disposal systems
- renal, hepatic, respiratory
- Nutritional regimen should make sense clinically
41Constraints on Nutrient Delivery
- Protein
- Renal failure without dialysis or with
ineffective dialysis - Hepatic encephalopathy
- Intractable negative nitrogen balance
42Constraints on Nutrient Delivery
- Carbohydrates
- Oxidative limit 7 gm/kg/day
- Glucose intolerance
- Minimum of 200 gm if large wound present
- Lipid
- Oxidative limit 2.5 gm/kg/day
- Hyperlipidemia
43Constraints on Nutrient Delivery
- Fluid
- Fluid overload
- Renal insufficiency/failure
- Congestive heart failure
- Pulmonary edema
- ARDS
44Composition of Standard Parenteral Dextrose
Solutions
- 5 - 70 solution dextrose in water
- 3.4 kcal/gm
- 500 ml of a 50 solution contains
- 50 gm/100 ml x 500 ml 250 gm dextrose
- 250 gm x 3.4 kcal/gm 850 kcal
45Composition of Standard Parenteral Amino Acid
Solutions
- Synthetic crystalline amino acids
- Contain essential and non-essential AA
- Variable amounts of electrolytes
- Concentrations depend on final volume
- Hypertonic solutions
46Characteristics ofIntravenous Lipid Emulsions
- Concentrations 10 and 20
- Parent oil Soybean or Safflower
- Osmolarity 280 - 340 mOsm/l
- Caloric content 10 1.1 kcal/ml 20 2.0
kcal/ml
47Electrolytes in Parenteral Nutrition Solutions
- Appropriate prescription requires regular
monitoring - For maintenance provision
- Add directly to the PN solution
- Tailor to individual patient needs
- Additional replacement for abnormal losses
- Deletions for patients with certain diseases
48Vitamins/Trace Elements in Parenteral Nutrition
Solutions
- Meet established guidelines for PN
- Water and fat-soluble vitamins provided
- Required for zinc, copper, manganese, chromium
selenium - Added daily to the solution
- Requirements may be increased for patients with
abnormal losses
49Administration of Parenteral Nutrition Rate and
Duration
- Administer, initially, over 24 hours
- Restrict the rate if regimen is not tolerated
- If patient is stable and tolerates regimen, a
cycling regimen may provide greater freedom,
comfort and ease of care
503-in-1 (T.N.A.) vs 3-in-2
- Advantages
- Cost (fewer supplies)
- Convenience
- More balanced delivery
- Better lipid tolerance
- Decreased potential for contamination
- Disadvantages
- Solution instability
- Incr. bacterial growth
- Cant use 0.22um filter
- Obscures precipitates
- Potential catheter occlusion
51Metabolic Complications of Parenteral Nutrition
1
- Electrolyte imbalance
- Na, K, Mg, PO4, Ca
- Hyperglycemia / hypoglycemia
- Dehydration
- Fluid Overload
- Metabolic Acidosis
52Metabolic Complications of Parenteral Nutrition -
2
- Hyperlipidemia
- Hypercapnea
- Vitamin/trace element deficiencies
- Essential fatty acid deficiency
- Liver dysfunction
53Micronutrient Deficiencies - I
- Essential Fatty Acids Scaly dermatitis
- Zinc Growth retardation
- Copper Anemia, Leukopenia
- Chromium Glucose intolerance, Neuropathy
- Molybdenum Confusion, Cholestasis
- Selenium (Cardio)myopathy
54Micronutrient Deficiencies - II
- Vitamin A Night blindness, keratosis
- Vitamin D Osteomalacia, Muscle weakness
- Vitamin E Retinal posterior column nuclei
dystrophy, - Vitamin K Bleeding diathesis
- Biotin Alopecia, Dermatitis, Neuritis
- Carnitine Abnormal LFTs
55Hepatic Disease
- Cholestasis (incl sludge) Hepatocellular
disease - Impaired hepatic transulfuration
- Transulfuration products facilitate
- Fat mobilisation
- Lipid membrane stability
- Bile secretion
- May progress to liver failure / transplantation
- Treatment - do not overfeed - ursodeoxycholic
acid - enteral supplements - carnitine
56Monitoring Patients on Parenteral Nutrition
- Clinical status
- Metabolic and biochemical aspects
- Delivery
- Catheter care, pump, volume infused
- Nutritional status/reassessment
57Parenteral Nutrition - Overview
- Indications, Contraindications and Routes of
Administration - Macronutrient and Micronutrient Use in TPN
- Importance of a Parenteral Nutrition Team
58The Need to Monitor NutritionU.K. NICE
- Malnutrition is common
- Malnutrition increases a patients vulnerability
to ill health - Nutrition in hospital is often inadequate
- Decisions on providing nutrition support are
complex - Nutritional care standards are highly variable
59Organisation of Nutrition Support
U.K. NICE
60What Needs to Happen?
- Screen
- Recognise who is malnourished and who is at risk
- Treat oral, enteral or parenteral
- Monitor and review
- This needs a multidisciplinary team
- But ... What is expected of a (PN) team?
61Goals of Inpatient Nutrition Delivery
- Identify patients at nutritional risk
- Identify need for nutritional support
- When to start
- When to stop
- Identify appropriate means of nutritional support
- Most cost-effective, least invasive intervention
- Identify and prevent complications of nutritional
support - Maintain safe vascular or enteral access
- Prevent / treat infection, thrombosis, metabolic
complications - Provide safe parenteral nutrition solutions
62Parenteral Nutrition Requirements
- Knowledge of
- Patients clinical status RN, MD
- Current
- Goals
- Patients nutritional status RD, RN
- Patients nutritional requirements RD
- Patients vascular access status RN, MD
- Parenteral solution compounding options BPharm
63St. Bartholomews Hospital/Science Photo Library
64Parenteral Nutrition TeamPossible Members
- Nutritionist expertise across PN, EN, short
bowel - Pharmacist with nutritional / PN expertise
- Physician with nutritional expertise
- Specialist Nutrition Support Nurse
- Support groups
- Vascular access team PICC lines
- Diagnostic imaging Central lines / ports
- Infectious diseases
- Enterostomal therapy
- Surgery
65Are TPN Teams Beneficial?
- Background
- TPN is a specialised, complex form of nutritional
support - This has led to the development of
multidisciplinary TPN teams - Are TPN teams effective for adult inpatients?
- Methods
- Systematic reivew of studies identified from
Cochrane library, CINAHL, Medline, Embase,
Complete Biomedical and Nursing Collections,
published in any language
Naylor C et al, JPEN 200428251-258.
66Are TPN Teams Beneficial?
- Results
- 48 studies identified
- Eleven eligible studies (No RCTs)
- 4 with concurrent controls
- 7 with historical controls
- TPN Team associated with
- Reduced total mechanical complications
- Fewer total metabolic electrolyte abnormalities
- Greater likelihood of receiving optimal caloric
intake
Naylor C et al, JPEN 200428251-258.
67Are TPN Teams Beneficial?
- Results
- Inconclusive results were seen regarding
- Reduction in catheter-related sepsis
- Reduction of inappropriate TPN usage
- Cost-effectiveness studies (n2, 356 patients)
suggest that TPN team is effective - Conclusion
- Overall, the effectiveness of TPN teams has not
been conclusively demonstrated .. although
there are potential benefits in several areas
Naylor C et al, JPEN 200428251-258.
68Are TPN Teams Beneficial?
- Thesis the only acceptable study outcomes are
mortality, morbidity cost-effectiveness
(Koretz) - Only evidence-based interventions should be
adopted - TPN is a complex intervention in a small number
of patients who have serious underlying disease - Standardisation of interventions is difficult
- Measurement of specified outcomes is difficult
- What is a TPN team and what is the comparator?
- One healthcare professional cannot, reasonably,
manage all aspects of PN delivery
69Are TPN Teams Beneficial?
- What is the evidence that a police force reduces
crime or is cost-effective? - What is the evidence that a hospital
accreditation team reduces death rates or is cost
effective? - What is the evidence that sending a player off in
a team sport is harmful? - Absence of evidence of benefit is NOT evidence
of absence of benefit.
70Parenteral Nutrition - Conclusion
- Is critical for malnourished patients who cannot
achieve adequate oral / enteral intake - Short-term inpatients
- Medium- to long-term Home PN allows patients
awaiting surgery patients with intestinal
failure to live at home - Requires meticulous attention to detail
- Requires recognition of risks and benefits
- Is a Team Game requires a Game Plan
71UK NICE Guidelines
- Do not let your patients starve and when you
offer them nutrition support, do so by the
safest, most simplest, effective route. - This is essential to good patient care.
- Mike StroudChair, Guideline Development Group
72Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Thank You!
73(No Transcript)
74Goals of Nutrition Support
- To minimize protein breakdown,
- To preserve lean body mass,
- To promote protein synthesis, and
- To optimize immune responses
75PN Summary Guidelines
- Determine if PN is truly indicated
- Assess the patient (medical history, medication
profile, anthropometric data lab values) - Determine need for long-term vs. short term
- lt710 days
- Confirm or establish adequate IV access
- Peripheral or central?
- Determine estimated kcal, protein and lipid needs
- 2030 kcal/kg
- Protein 0.81.5 gm/kg
- Higher levels may be needed in severe catabolic
states - Lipid to provide 30 of kcals
76PN Summary Guidelines
- Determine initial electrolyte, vitamin and trace
element requirements consider ongoing losses - Consider any additional additives to PN
formulation including insulin and H2-receptor
antagonists - Monitor for
- Risk of refeeding syndrome
- Glucose intolerance
- Start low advance slowly if labs stable over
24-48 hours - Fluid, electrolyte, metabolic, macro- and
micro-nutrient changes - Complications sepsis, thrombosis, abuse
- Initiate trophic feedings or convert patient to
PO or enteral feeding when feasible
77Intravenous Vitamins RDI (ASPEN)
- Vitamin RDI (FDA/AMA/NAG)
- Thiamine (B1) 6 mg
- Riboflavin (B2) 3.6 mg
- Pyridoxine (B6) 6 mg
- Cyanocobalamin (B12) 5 mcg
- Niacin 40 mg
- Folic acid 600 mcg
- Pantothenic acid 15 mg
- Biotin 60 mcg
- Ascorbic acid (C) 200 mg
- Vitamin A 3300 IU
- Vitamin D 5 mg
- Vitamin E 10 IU
- Vitamin K 150 mcg
78Metabolic Bone Disease
- Pre-existing disease malabsorption
- Aluminium contamination
- Inadequate calcium provision
- Excess Vitamin D in TPN - measure both 25-OH
1,25 DHCC - Monitor DEXA, Ca, Vit D, PTH, Albumin
79The Whole Team Makes it HappenThe U.K. NICE
- Healthcare professionals involved in patient care
should receive education and training on
nutrition support - All people needing nutrition support should
receive coordinated care from a multidisciplinary
team - Acute care hospitals should employ at least one
specialist nutrition support nurse - Hospitals should have a nutrition steering
committee working within the clinical governance
framework
80Possible ComplicationsAssociated with Long-Term
TPN
- Gastrointestinal dysfunction
- Trace element deficiencies
- Hepatic steatosis/cholestasis
- Metabolic bone disease
- Psychosocial difficulties
- Financial difficulties
81Valved Groshong Line
Groshong Valve
- At rest valve is closed and no blood leaks
out - On infusion valve leaflets are pushed out by
infusion solution - On aspiration valve leaflets are pulled in by
negative pressure and blood returns
82Normal Serum ElectrolytesParenteral Enteral
Intake Ranges
83Adult RDI of IV Trace Minerals
84Monitoring PN PatientsClinical Status
- Vital signs
- Intake/output
- Urine, Stool, Other (eg fistula output)
- Weight
- Fluid requirements
- Patient complaints
- Physical exam
- Overall clinical status
85Monitoring PN PatientsMetabolic and Biochemical
Aspects
- Blood studies
- Renal function Lytes, Mg, Ca, Phos, BUN, Cr
- Hematologic CBC (Hgb, WBC, Plt), INR
- Liver function Alk Phos, AST/ALT, Bilirubin
- Glucose/lipid tolerance Glucose, Triglycerides
- Iron status Iron, TIBC, Ferritin
- Serum proteins Albumin
- Insulin coverage
- DEXA