A pilot study of alternative substrates in the critically Ill subject using a ketogenic feed

Author:

McNelly Angela,Langan Anne,Bear Danielle E.ORCID,Page Alexandria,Martin Tim,Seidu Fatima,Santos Filipa,Rooney KieronORCID,Liang Kaifeng,Heales Simon J.,Baldwin Tomas,Alldritt IsabelleORCID,Crossland Hannah,Atherton Philip J.,Wilkinson Daniel,Montgomery Hugh,Prowle John,Pearse Rupert,Eaton SimonORCID,Puthucheary Zudin A.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractBioenergetic failure caused by impaired utilisation of glucose and fatty acids contributes to organ dysfunction across multiple tissues in critical illness. Ketone bodies may form an alternative substrate source, but the feasibility and safety of inducing a ketogenic state in physiologically unstable patients is not known. Twenty-nine mechanically ventilated adults with multi-organ failure managed on intensive care units were randomised (Ketogenic n = 14, Control n = 15) into a two-centre pilot open-label trial of ketogenic versus standard enteral feeding. The primary endpoints were assessment of feasibility and safety, recruitment and retention rates and achievement of ketosis and glucose control. Ketogenic feeding was feasible, safe, well tolerated and resulted in ketosis in all patients in the intervention group, with a refusal rate of 4.1% and 82.8% retention. Patients who received ketogenic feeding had fewer hypoglycaemic events (0.0% vs. 1.6%), required less exogenous international units of insulin (0 (Interquartile range 0-16) vs.78 (Interquartile range 0-412) but had slightly more daily episodes of diarrhoea (53.5% vs. 42.9%) over the trial period. Ketogenic feeding was feasible and may be an intervention for addressing bioenergetic failure in critically ill patients. Clinical Trials.gov registration: NCT04101071.

Funder

Baxter International Inc. | Baxter Healthcare Corporation

National Institute of Health Research

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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