Clinical Effects of Postoperative Parenteral Glutamine-Dipeptide Supplementation in Surgical Intensive Care Unit 3 Patients: a Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

Author:

Barone Mirko1,Frontera Regina2,Liouras Rita Vaia2,Serano Luca3,Ippoliti Massimo1,Dell'Atti Ivan3,Vetrugno Luigi2,Maggiore Salvatore Maurizio2,Mucilli Felice4

Affiliation:

1. Department of General and Thoracic Surgery, “SS. Annunziata” University Hospital - Chieti, Italy

2. Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, “SS. Annunziata” University Hospital - Chieti, Italy. “G. d’Annunzio” University, School of Medicine - Chieti, Italy

3. Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, “SS. Annunziata” University Hospital - Chieti, Italy

4. Department of General and Thoracic Surgery, “SS. Annunziata” University Hospital - Chieti, Italy. “G. d’Annunzio” University, School of Medicine - Chieti, Italy

Abstract

Abstract Background- Glutamine plays a vital role as an energy substrate the inflammatory response, prevention of organ injury and renal acid buffering. Parenteral glutamine supplementation could reduce in-hospital and ICU morbidity and mortality. Objective- Aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis is to investigate the effects of parenteral administration of GLN in adult surgical critically ill ICU patients. Study selection- Two-arm studies about adult surgical ICU patients undergoing postoperative glutamine-enriched parenteral nutrition (experimental cohorts) vs control ones. Endpoints- Primary endpoint was in-hospital outcome (mortality, length of stay, length of mechanical ventilation). Secondary endpoint was the evaluation of nosocomial infections. Results- According to PRISMA ® 2020 flow diagram, eight randomized controlled trials were included for a total of 603 patients. No significant differences about in-hospital and ICU mortality were found (p=0.16 and p=0.53, respectively). Parenteral glutamine-supplementation was associated with a reduction of hospitalization (p=0.02), without influencing nor ICU stay (p=0.35) neither postoperative mechanical ventilation (p=0.18). Finally, dipeptide administration did not reduce cumulative incidence of nosocomial infections (p=0.41); however, a protective role for postoperative pneumonia was reported (p=0.05). Conclusions- Excepting for a reduction in hospital stay and incidence of nosocomial pneumonia, glutamine-dipeptide parenteral supplementation does not add any benefit in surgical ICU patients.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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5. doi: 10.3390/nu10111564. PMID: 30360490; PMCID: PMC6266414.

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