The association between enteral nutrition with survival of critical patients with COVID‐19

Author:

Gholamalizadeh Maryam1,Salimi Zahra2,Mobarakeh Khadijeh Abbasi3,Mahmoudi Zahra4,Tajadod Shirin5,Mousavi Mele Mahdi6,Alami Farkhondeh7,Bahar Bojlul8,Doaei Saeid1,Khoshdooz Sara9ORCID,Rahvar Masoume10,Gholami Somayeh10,Pourtaleb Masoume10

Affiliation:

1. Cancer Research Center Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences Tehran Iran

2. Student Research Committee, Faculty of Nutrition and Food Technology Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences Tehran Iran

3. Department of Community Nutrition, Nutrition and Food Security Research Center, School of Nutrition and Food Science Isfahan University of Medical Sciences Isfahan Iran

4. Department of Nutrition Science and Research Branch Islamic Azad University Tehran Iran

5. Department of Nutrition, School of Public Health, International Campus Iran University of Medical Sciences Tehran Iran

6. Department of Nutrition University of Medical Sciences Tabriz Iran

7. Department of Nutrition, Faculty of Medicine Urmia University of Medical Sciences Urmia Iran

8. Nutrition Sciences and Applied Food Safety Studies, Research Centre for Global Development, School of Sport and Health Sciences University of Central Lancashire Preston UK

9. Razi Clinical Research Development Unit, Razi Hospital University ofCentral Lancashire Rasht Iran

10. Intensive Care Unit (ICU), Razi Hospital Guilan University of Medical Sciences Rasht Iran

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) results in several complications and mortality in intensive care unit (ICU) patients. Limited studies have investigated the effect of enteral nutrition (EN) on the survival of COVID‐19 patients in the ICU. The aim of this study was to investigate the association of EN with biochemical and pathological indices associated with mortality in ICU patients with COVID‐19.MethodsThis case–control study was conducted on 240 patients with COVID‐19 hospitalized in the ICU including 120 eventual nonsurvived as the cases and 120 survived patients as the controls. All of the patients received EN as a high protein high volume or standard formula. Data on general information, anthropometric measurements, and the results of lab tests were collected.ResultsThe recovered patients received significantly more high protein (60.8% vs. 39.6%, p = .004) and high volume (61.6% vs. 42.3%, p = .005) formula compared to the nonsurvived group. Mortality was inversely associated with high volume (odds ratio [OR]: 0.45 confidence interval [CI]95%, p = .008) and high protein (OR: 0.42 CI95%, p = .003) formula. The results remained significant after adjusting for age and sex. Further adjustment for underlying diseases, smoking, body mass index, and the acute physiology and chronic health evaluation II (APACHE II) score did not change the results.ConclusionThe findings of the study showed that there was a significant inverse association between mortality and high volume and high protein formula in patients with COVID‐19. Further investigation is warranted.

Publisher

Wiley

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