Biomarkers in critical care nutrition

被引:0
作者
Christian Stoppe
Sebastian Wendt
Nilesh M. Mehta
Charlene Compher
Jean-Charles Preiser
Daren K. Heyland
Arnold S. Kristof
机构
[1] 3CARE—Cardiovascular Critical Care & Anesthesia Evaluation and Research,Department of Anesthesiology
[2] University Hospital RWTH Aachen,Department of Anesthesiology, Critical Care and Pain Medicine, Division of Critical Care Medicine, Boston Children’s Hospital
[3] Harvard Medical School,Department of Biobehavioral Health Science, University of Pennsylvania and Clinical Nutrition Support Service
[4] Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania,Erasme University Hospital
[5] Université Libre de Bruxelles,Department of Critical Care Medicine
[6] Queen’s University,Clinical Evaluation Research Unit
[7] Kingston General Hospital,Meakins
[8] Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre,Christie Laboratories and Translational Research in Respiratory Diseases Program, Faculty of Medicine, Departments of Medicine and Critical Care
来源
Critical Care | / 24卷
关键词
Nutrition; Biomarker; Metabolism; Critical care;
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摘要
The goal of nutrition support is to provide the substrates required to match the bioenergetic needs of the patient and promote the net synthesis of macromolecules required for the preservation of lean mass, organ function, and immunity. Contemporary observational studies have exposed the pervasive undernutrition of critically ill patients and its association with adverse clinical outcomes. The intuitive hypothesis is that optimization of nutrition delivery should improve ICU clinical outcomes. It is therefore surprising that multiple large randomized controlled trials have failed to demonstrate the clinical benefit of restoring or maximizing nutrient intake. This may be in part due to the absence of biological markers that identify patients who are most likely to benefit from nutrition interventions and that monitor the effects of nutrition support. Here, we discuss the need for practical risk stratification tools in critical care nutrition, a proposed rationale for targeted biomarker development, and potential approaches that can be adopted for biomarker identification and validation in the field.
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