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Early parenteral nutrition and growth outcomes in preterm infants: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Early parenteral nutrition and growth outcomes in preterm infants: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Early parenteral nutrition and growth outcomes in preterm infants: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Background: The achievement of adequate nutritional intakes in preterm infants is challenging and may explain the poor growth often seen in this group. The use of early parenteral nutrition (PN) is one potential strategy to address this problem, although the benefits and harms are unknown. Objective: We determined whether earlier administration of PN benefits growth outcomes in preterm infants. Design: We conducted a systematic review of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and observational studies. Results: Eight RCTs and 13 observational studies met the inclusion criteria (n = 553 and 1796 infants). The meta-analysis was limited by disparate growth-outcome measures. An assessment of bias was difficult because of inadequate reporting. Results are given as mean differences (95% CIs). Early PN reduced the time to regain birth weight by 2.2 d (1.1, 3.2 d) for RCTs and 3.2 d (2.0, 4.4 d) in observational studies. The maximum percentage weight loss with early PN was lower by 3.1 percentage points (1.7, 4.5 percentage points) for RCTs and by 3.5 percentage points (2.6, 4.3 percentage points) for observational studies. Early PN improved weight at discharge or 36 wk postmenstrual age by 14.9 g (5.3, 24.5 g) (observational studies only), but no benefit was shown for length or head circumference. There was no evidence that early PN significantly affects risk of mortality, necrotizing enterocolitis, sepsis, chronic lung disease, intraventricular hemorrhage, or cholestasis. Conclusions: The results of this review, although subject to some limitations, show that early PN provides a benefit for some shortterm growth outcomes. No evidence that early PN increases morbidity or mortality was found. Neonatal research would benefit from the development of a set of core growth outcome measures.

0002-9165
816-826
Moyses, Helen E.
56434d9c-870f-4539-a66a-c791add44f67
Johnson, Mark J.
64135487-45a1-46a6-a34b-595143e3c9a6
Leaf, Alison A.
380f75d8-ccbd-4538-a45a-c4912fd86fc3
Cornelius, Victoria R.
2edd148b-5385-4534-96a3-257c17d08ac4
Moyses, Helen E.
56434d9c-870f-4539-a66a-c791add44f67
Johnson, Mark J.
64135487-45a1-46a6-a34b-595143e3c9a6
Leaf, Alison A.
380f75d8-ccbd-4538-a45a-c4912fd86fc3
Cornelius, Victoria R.
2edd148b-5385-4534-96a3-257c17d08ac4

Moyses, Helen E., Johnson, Mark J., Leaf, Alison A. and Cornelius, Victoria R. (2013) Early parenteral nutrition and growth outcomes in preterm infants: A systematic review and meta-analysis. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 97 (4), 816-826. (doi:10.3945/ajcn.112.042028).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: The achievement of adequate nutritional intakes in preterm infants is challenging and may explain the poor growth often seen in this group. The use of early parenteral nutrition (PN) is one potential strategy to address this problem, although the benefits and harms are unknown. Objective: We determined whether earlier administration of PN benefits growth outcomes in preterm infants. Design: We conducted a systematic review of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and observational studies. Results: Eight RCTs and 13 observational studies met the inclusion criteria (n = 553 and 1796 infants). The meta-analysis was limited by disparate growth-outcome measures. An assessment of bias was difficult because of inadequate reporting. Results are given as mean differences (95% CIs). Early PN reduced the time to regain birth weight by 2.2 d (1.1, 3.2 d) for RCTs and 3.2 d (2.0, 4.4 d) in observational studies. The maximum percentage weight loss with early PN was lower by 3.1 percentage points (1.7, 4.5 percentage points) for RCTs and by 3.5 percentage points (2.6, 4.3 percentage points) for observational studies. Early PN improved weight at discharge or 36 wk postmenstrual age by 14.9 g (5.3, 24.5 g) (observational studies only), but no benefit was shown for length or head circumference. There was no evidence that early PN significantly affects risk of mortality, necrotizing enterocolitis, sepsis, chronic lung disease, intraventricular hemorrhage, or cholestasis. Conclusions: The results of this review, although subject to some limitations, show that early PN provides a benefit for some shortterm growth outcomes. No evidence that early PN increases morbidity or mortality was found. Neonatal research would benefit from the development of a set of core growth outcome measures.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 9 January 2013
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 February 2013
Published date: 30 April 2013

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 479779
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479779
ISSN: 0002-9165
PURE UUID: 013144c4-7536-4485-9a38-7a689fa026cd

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Date deposited: 26 Jul 2023 17:01
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:20

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Contributors

Author: Helen E. Moyses
Author: Mark J. Johnson
Author: Alison A. Leaf
Author: Victoria R. Cornelius

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