Affiliation:
1. Department of Paediatrics Brighton and Sussex Medical School Brighton UK
2. Department of Child Development and Neurodisability Children's Health Ireland at Tallaght Dublin Ireland
3. Department of Paediatrics Royal Alexandra Children's Hospital Brighton UK
4. Department of Paediatric Dietetics Royal Alexandra Children's Hospital Brighton UK
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundInterest and use of blended diets (BD) for young people who are tube fed has significantly increased in the last decade, driven primarily by the desires of motivated caregivers. This review identified, appraised and synthesised the available evidence on the benefits and complications of BD versus commercial feeds.MethodsA systematic review following PRISMA guidance and registered with PROSPERO was conducted across PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, Scopus and Cochrane up to August 2022. Inclusion criteria: English language studies including (1) children, (2) original research (interventional and observational) and (3) examination of BD outcomes. Exclusion criteria were (1) unoriginal research or case reports, (2) focus on feeding management, preparations or attitudes and (3) comparing commercial blends only. Data were synthesised using an established narrative synthesis approach using the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool.ResultsEight hundred and six database results were identified and 61 were sought for retrieval. A full‐text article review revealed seven eligible studies, involving 267 participants (age range 9 months to 26 years). Studies reported differences in gastrointestinal symptoms (n = 222), medication use (n = 119), growth (n = 189) and complications or adverse events (n = 91). The results indicate positive outcomes, particularly in gastrointestinal symptom control, with few reports of mild adverse events in the included studies.ConclusionsThere is a paucity of data in this area and much heterogeneity in the included studies, but the available literature points towards positive outcomes. This is an important and highly relevant topic, and more primary research, ideally using standardised reporting, is required to answer the key questions.
Subject
Nutrition and Dietetics,Medicine (miscellaneous)
Cited by
6 articles.
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