Glutamine and antioxidants in the critically ill patient: a post hoc analysis of a large-scale randomized trial

Daren K Heyland, Gunnar Elke, Deborah Cook, Mette M Berger, Paul E Wischmeyer, Martin Albert, John Muscedere, Gwynne Jones, Andrew G Day, Canadian Critical Care Trials Group, John Muscedere, Charlene Hammond, Monica Meyers, Susan Fleury, Nicole O' Callaghan, Deborah Cook, Ellen McDonald, France Clarke, Gwynne Jones, Irene Watpool, Tracy McArdle, Rebecca Porteous, Guiseppe Pagliarello, Tracy McArdle, Dean Chittock, Maureen Gardner, Susie Logie, Denise Foster, Martin Albert, Patrice Deroy, Huber Simard, Stephane Ahern, Johanne Harvey, Sheldon Magder, Laura Banici, Jim Kutsogiannis, Patrica Thompson, Kirby Scott, Reagan Bartel, Darlene Jossy, Christine Krawchuk, Dan Stollery, Jennifer Barchard, Michael Krause, Gordon Wood, Fiona Auld, Leslie Atkins, Claudio Martin, Eileen Campbell, Rick Hall, Lisa Julien, Kosar Khwaja, Laura Banici, Francois Lauzier, Chantal Gagne, Marie Thibodeault, Gordon Wood, Fiona Auld, Peggy Leonard, Leslie Atkins, Sangeeta Mehta, Maedean Brown, Tina Mele, Tracey Bentall, Francois Lellouche, Marie-Claude Ferland, Maureen Meade, Lori Hand, Bernard McDonald, Denyse Winch, Rob Fowler, Nicole Marinoff, Peter Dodek, Betty Jean Ashley, Kim Wiebe, Wendy Janz, Paul Wischmeyer, Elizabeth Luzier, Angela Baer, Mary McCarthy, Laurie Chowayou, Kimberly Garrett, Fletcher Allen, Renee Stapleton, Julie Martin, Bridget Shea, Mohamed Saad, Crissie DeSpirito, Rosemary Kosar, Jeanette Podbielski, Laura Vincent, Kristi Morin, Mohamed Saad, Crissie DeSpirito, Catherine Dudick, Jackie White, Heidi Frankel, Lee Ann Smith, Tom White, Merin Kinikini, Ben Briggs, Michael Murray, Andre Watkins, Mette Berger, Frederik Delodder, Gunnar Elke, Norbert Weiler, Nina Schulz-Ruthenberg, Stefanie D' Aria, Matthias Gründling, Sven-Olaf Kuhn, Liane Guderian, Hanswerner Bause, Philip Gabriel, Axel Prause, Cornelia Wolf, Herbert Spapen, Godelieve Opdenacker, Jean Charles Preiser, Joelle Lefranq, Daren K Heyland, Gunnar Elke, Deborah Cook, Mette M Berger, Paul E Wischmeyer, Martin Albert, John Muscedere, Gwynne Jones, Andrew G Day, Canadian Critical Care Trials Group, John Muscedere, Charlene Hammond, Monica Meyers, Susan Fleury, Nicole O' Callaghan, Deborah Cook, Ellen McDonald, France Clarke, Gwynne Jones, Irene Watpool, Tracy McArdle, Rebecca Porteous, Guiseppe Pagliarello, Tracy McArdle, Dean Chittock, Maureen Gardner, Susie Logie, Denise Foster, Martin Albert, Patrice Deroy, Huber Simard, Stephane Ahern, Johanne Harvey, Sheldon Magder, Laura Banici, Jim Kutsogiannis, Patrica Thompson, Kirby Scott, Reagan Bartel, Darlene Jossy, Christine Krawchuk, Dan Stollery, Jennifer Barchard, Michael Krause, Gordon Wood, Fiona Auld, Leslie Atkins, Claudio Martin, Eileen Campbell, Rick Hall, Lisa Julien, Kosar Khwaja, Laura Banici, Francois Lauzier, Chantal Gagne, Marie Thibodeault, Gordon Wood, Fiona Auld, Peggy Leonard, Leslie Atkins, Sangeeta Mehta, Maedean Brown, Tina Mele, Tracey Bentall, Francois Lellouche, Marie-Claude Ferland, Maureen Meade, Lori Hand, Bernard McDonald, Denyse Winch, Rob Fowler, Nicole Marinoff, Peter Dodek, Betty Jean Ashley, Kim Wiebe, Wendy Janz, Paul Wischmeyer, Elizabeth Luzier, Angela Baer, Mary McCarthy, Laurie Chowayou, Kimberly Garrett, Fletcher Allen, Renee Stapleton, Julie Martin, Bridget Shea, Mohamed Saad, Crissie DeSpirito, Rosemary Kosar, Jeanette Podbielski, Laura Vincent, Kristi Morin, Mohamed Saad, Crissie DeSpirito, Catherine Dudick, Jackie White, Heidi Frankel, Lee Ann Smith, Tom White, Merin Kinikini, Ben Briggs, Michael Murray, Andre Watkins, Mette Berger, Frederik Delodder, Gunnar Elke, Norbert Weiler, Nina Schulz-Ruthenberg, Stefanie D' Aria, Matthias Gründling, Sven-Olaf Kuhn, Liane Guderian, Hanswerner Bause, Philip Gabriel, Axel Prause, Cornelia Wolf, Herbert Spapen, Godelieve Opdenacker, Jean Charles Preiser, Joelle Lefranq

Abstract

Background: The recent large randomized controlled trial of glutamine and antioxidant supplementation suggested that high-dose glutamine is associated with increased mortality in critically ill patients with multiorgan failure. The objectives of the present analyses were to reevaluate the effect of supplementation after controlling for baseline covariates and to identify potentially important subgroup effects.

Materials and methods: This study was a post hoc analysis of a prospective factorial 2 × 2 randomized trial conducted in 40 intensive care units in North America and Europe. In total, 1223 mechanically ventilated adult patients with multiorgan failure were randomized to receive glutamine, antioxidants, both glutamine and antioxidants, or placebo administered separate from artificial nutrition. We compared each of the 3 active treatment arms (glutamine alone, antioxidants alone, and glutamine + antioxidants) with placebo on 28-day mortality. Post hoc, treatment effects were examined within subgroups defined by baseline patient characteristics. Logistic regression was used to estimate treatment effects within subgroups after adjustment for baseline covariates and to identify treatment-by-subgroup interactions (effect modification).

Results: The 28-day mortality rates in the placebo, glutamine, antioxidant, and combination arms were 25%, 32%, 29%, and 33%, respectively. After adjusting for prespecified baseline covariates, the adjusted odds ratio of 28-day mortality vs placebo was 1.5 (95% confidence interval, 1.0-2.1, P = .05), 1.2 (0.8-1.8, P = .40), and 1.4 (0.9-2.0, P = .09) for glutamine, antioxidant, and glutamine plus antioxidant arms, respectively. In the post hoc subgroup analysis, both glutamine and antioxidants appeared most harmful in patients with baseline renal dysfunction. No subgroups suggested reduced mortality with supplements.

Conclusions: After adjustment for baseline covariates, early provision of high-dose glutamine administered separately from artificial nutrition was not beneficial and may be associated with increased mortality in critically ill patients with multiorgan failure. For both glutamine and antioxidants, the greatest potential for harm was observed in patients with multiorgan failure that included renal dysfunction upon study enrollment.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00133978.

Keywords: antioxidants; critical care; glutamine; post hoc analysis; randomized clinical trials.

© 2014 American Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Kaplan-Meier survival curve by treatment arm. Kaplan-Meier survival curves of the 4 different treatment groups: (1) antioxidants, (2) glutamine, (3) glutamine and antioxidants, and (4) placebo. In total, 128 (10.5%) of patients were lost to follow-up prior to the final 6-month assessment. The large amount of censoring after day 150 is not loss to follow-up but rather patients who had their final assessment within 4 weeks prior to day 180, as allowed by the study protocol.

Source: PubMed

3
Subskrybuj