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Systematic review and meta-analysis: the clinical and physiological effects of fibre-containing enteral formulate

Systematic review and meta-analysis: the clinical and physiological effects of fibre-containing enteral formulate
Systematic review and meta-analysis: the clinical and physiological effects of fibre-containing enteral formulate
Background: enteral nutrition can be associated with gastrointestinal side effects and fibre supplementation has been proposed as a means to normalize bowel function.
Aim: to evaluate systematically the effects of fibre supplementation of enteral feeds in healthy volunteers and patients both in the hospital and community settings.
Methods: electronic and manual bibliographic searches were conducted. Controlled studies in adults or children, comparing fibre-supplemented vs. fibre-free formulae given as the sole source of nutrition for at least 3 days, were included.
Results: fifty-one studies (including 43 randomized-controlled trials), enrolling 1762 subjects (1591 patients and 171 healthy volunteers) met the inclusion criteria. Fibre supplementation was generally well tolerated. In the hospital setting, the incidence of diarrhoea was reduced as a result of fibre administration (OR 0.68, 95% CI: 0.48–0.96; 13 randomized-controlled trials). Meta-regression showed a more pronounced effect when the baseline incidence of diarrhoea was high. In both patients and healthy subjects, fibre significantly reduced bowel frequency when baseline frequency was high and increased it when it was low, revealing a significant moderating effect of fibre.
Conclusions: the review indicates that the fibre-supplemented enteral formulae have important physiological effects and clinical benefits. There is a need to use a consistent approach to undertake more studies on this issue in the community setting.
0269-2813
120-145
Elia, M.
964bf436-e623-46d6-bc3f-5dd04c9ef4c1
Engfer, M.B.
c561dacb-8d8b-4baf-8907-04b21935f3b7
Green, C.J.
d14dc500-f63a-4727-bd82-630f14a0ee50
Silk, D.B.A.
add8ebf3-f861-49ba-9de8-9b340874fe68
Elia, M.
964bf436-e623-46d6-bc3f-5dd04c9ef4c1
Engfer, M.B.
c561dacb-8d8b-4baf-8907-04b21935f3b7
Green, C.J.
d14dc500-f63a-4727-bd82-630f14a0ee50
Silk, D.B.A.
add8ebf3-f861-49ba-9de8-9b340874fe68

Elia, M., Engfer, M.B., Green, C.J. and Silk, D.B.A. (2007) Systematic review and meta-analysis: the clinical and physiological effects of fibre-containing enteral formulate. Alimentary pharmacology & therapeutics, 27 (2), 120-145. (doi:10.1111/j.1365-2036.2007.03544.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: enteral nutrition can be associated with gastrointestinal side effects and fibre supplementation has been proposed as a means to normalize bowel function.
Aim: to evaluate systematically the effects of fibre supplementation of enteral feeds in healthy volunteers and patients both in the hospital and community settings.
Methods: electronic and manual bibliographic searches were conducted. Controlled studies in adults or children, comparing fibre-supplemented vs. fibre-free formulae given as the sole source of nutrition for at least 3 days, were included.
Results: fifty-one studies (including 43 randomized-controlled trials), enrolling 1762 subjects (1591 patients and 171 healthy volunteers) met the inclusion criteria. Fibre supplementation was generally well tolerated. In the hospital setting, the incidence of diarrhoea was reduced as a result of fibre administration (OR 0.68, 95% CI: 0.48–0.96; 13 randomized-controlled trials). Meta-regression showed a more pronounced effect when the baseline incidence of diarrhoea was high. In both patients and healthy subjects, fibre significantly reduced bowel frequency when baseline frequency was high and increased it when it was low, revealing a significant moderating effect of fibre.
Conclusions: the review indicates that the fibre-supplemented enteral formulae have important physiological effects and clinical benefits. There is a need to use a consistent approach to undertake more studies on this issue in the community setting.

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Published date: 8 October 2007

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 80037
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/80037
ISSN: 0269-2813
PURE UUID: 5e24d18f-51b4-4aa3-971b-ae6a6946b079

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Date deposited: 23 Mar 2010
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 00:34

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Contributors

Author: M. Elia
Author: M.B. Engfer
Author: C.J. Green
Author: D.B.A. Silk

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