Limited long-term survival after in-hospital intestinal failure requiring total parenteral nutrition

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Abstract

Background: Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) is an invasive and advanced rescue feeding technique that has acceptable short-term survival although at costs of substantial risks. Survival after the clinical use of TPN >6 mo is unknown. Objective: We determined long-term survival after clinical TPN use in a consecutive cohort who were attending an academic hospital. Design: The study included a prospective cohort with a retrospective analysis of all 537 consecutive episodes of TPN in 437 patients between January 2010 and April 2012. Follow-up was until October 2013 with a total follow-up of 608 patient-years. Survival was analyzed by using Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression. Results: Survival was 58% in 437 patients with a first-time use of TPN at an average of 1.5 y after the initiation of TPN. The mortality rate was 30 deaths/100 patient-years. Older age, admission at an intensive care unit or a nonsurgical department, lower body mass index, and an underlying malignancy were positively associated with mortality. Conclusion: TPN use, if correctly indicated, is a clinical sign of intestinal failure and a surrogate marker for markedly increased risk of mortality even >1.5 y after TPN use. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT02189993 with protocol identification name TPN-01.

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Oterdoom, L. H., Dam, S. M. T., De Groot, S. D. W., Arjaans, W., & Van Bodegraven, A. A. (2014). Limited long-term survival after in-hospital intestinal failure requiring total parenteral nutrition. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 100(4), 1102–1107. https://doi.org/10.3945/ajcn.114.087015

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