Bridging the Guideline-Practice Gap: The Critical Care Experience Rupinder Dhaliwal, RD Daren...

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Bridging the Guideline-Practice Gap: The Critical Care Experience

Rupinder Dhaliwal, RD

Daren Heyland, MD

Guidelines for Nutrition Therapy in the ICU

Rupinder Dhaliwal, RD

Operations Manager

Clinical Evaluation Research Unit

Kingston, Ontario

Disclosure

Canadian Clinical Practice Guidelines for Nutrition Support for the Mechanically Ventilated Critically ill• Co-Author

Rupinder Dhaliwal

Critical Care Nutrition

The right nutrient/nutritional strategyThe right timingThe right patientThe right intensity (dose/duration)With the right outcome!

www.criticalcarenutrition.com

www.criticalcarenutrition.com

A Continuous Quality Improvement Effort

What is done?

What ought to be done?

What do we need to do differently?

“Gaps” - site reports

How to change? “KT strategies”

RCTs, Systematic Reviews, and Evidence-based practice guidelines

Survey resultswww.criticalcarenutrition.comWhat is done?

To identify the similarities and the differences between the recommendations of three North American Clinical Practice Guidelines

Understand why these differences occur

Need for harmonization across guidelines

Objectives

Why bother with guidelines?

Clinical practice guidelines are

“systematically developed statements to assist practitioner and patient decisions about appropriate health care for specific clinical circumstances.”

Best available evidence with integration of potential benefits, harm, feasibility, cost

Reduce variability in care, improve quality, reduce costs and can improve outcomes

The more guidelines they publish, the more confused I get!

Review of guidelines needed

A review of the content and the evidence used to formulate the

recommendations

What is neededAssesses the process of development

Which Guidelines to compare?

Critically ill populations

Developed by North American professional/national organization

Published/online 1999-2009

Addressed more than one single topic

Were not consensus statements (i.e. immunonutrition )

Were original work vs. part of cluster RCTs

North American Guidelines

www.criticalcarenutrition.com

• Population

• Levels of Evidence

• Grading used

• Time frames, outcomes

• Level of transparency between evidence and recommendation

What differences?

Differences Area Canadian ADA ASPEN/SCCM

Population Mechanically ventilated critically ill patients

no elective surgery

Critically ill patients eligible for EN

no burns

Medical and surgical critically ill patients

expected to stay in the ICU > 2-3 days

Level of evidence

RCTs, meta analyses

Level 1 or 2 based on validity of evidence

All levels of evidence

Grade 1-5 based on validity of evidence Minimum n>20

All levels of evidence

Level 1-5 based on validity of evidence

Time Frame 1980-2009 1993-20031993-20091996-2006 (2009)

unclear

Outcomes clinical outcomes clinical and non clinical outcomes

clinical and non clinical outcomes

Grading Canadian ADA ASPEN/SCCM

Strongest

Weakest

“Strongly recommend”no reservations re: endorsement

(5%)

“Strong”benefits exceed harmhigh quality evidenceanticipated benefits (41%)

“A” supported by at least 2 Level 1 (RCT n > 100)(3%)

“Recommend”supportive evidence but minor uncertainties re: safety/feasibility or costs

“Fair”Same as above but quality of evidence is not as strong

“B” supported by 1 level 1

“Should be considered”Evidence was weak or major uncertainties re: safety/cost/feasibility

“Weak”Suspect quality of evidencelittle clear benefit

“C”Level 2 (RCTs <100)

“Insufficient data”Inadequate data or conflicting evidence(51%)

“Consensus”Expert opinion

“D”At least 2 Level 3(non RCT, contemporaneous controls)

“Insufficient evidence”No pertinent evidenceand harm/risk is ?(37%)

“E”Level 4 (non RCT, historical controls)Level 5 (case series), expert opinion (39%)

Criteria High Quality CPGsRigor of development:

– Provide detailed information on the search strategy, the inclusion/exclusion criteria, and methods used to formulate the recommendation (reproducible).

Transparent link between evidence, values, and

resulting recommendation

– External review

– Procedure for updating the CPGAGREE Qual Saf Health Care 2003;12:18

Integration of values

Validity Homogeneity

SafetyFeasibility

Cost

evidence integration of values+

practiceguidelines

Indirect calorimetry vs. predictive equations

Differences: recommendations

Canadian ADA ASPEN/SCCM

Insufficient data

1 small RCT burn patients

Strong

Use indirect calorimetry

Non RCTs, no clinical outcomes

Grade E

Use either, caution with equations

Narrative review article

Dose of EN/Achieving target range

Differences: recommendations

Canadian ADA ASPEN/SCCM

Should be considered

Use strategies to optimize EN i.e. goal rate start, 250 mls GRVs, m. agents, small bowel feeding

No threshold

1 RCT and 2 Cluster RCTs

Fair

Give at least 60-70% energy within first week

2 RCTs and 2 non RCTs

Grade C

Provide >50-65% goal calories in first week

Specifics for Obese (Grade E and D)

1 RCT and 1 non RCT

Gastric Residual Volumes & Motility agents

Differences: recommendations

Canadian ADA ASPEN/SCCM

GRVs Should be considered 250 mls

1 RCT and 2 Cluster RCTs

Consensus

250 mls

Grade B

500 mls

4 RCTs

Motility agents Recommendmetoclopromide

Strongmetoclopromide

Grade CMetoclopromideErythromycinOpiod antagonists

Arginine

Differences: recommendations

Canadian ADA ASPEN/SCCM

Recommend NOT be used

Meta-analyses of 22 RCTs3 RCTs harm(Bower. Bertolini, Dent)

FairNot be used

11 RCTs2 RCTS harm(Bower, Bertolini)

Grade A SurgicalGrade B MedicalCautious in severe sepsisVolume use 50-65% goal

earlier meta-analyses showing no benefitRCT showing benefit (Galban)

Grade A: based on elective surgery patients

Enteral Glutamine

Differences: recommendations

Canadian ADA ASPEN/SCCM

Burns & Trauma: Should be considered

Other ICU: Insufficient data

9 RCTS

-------- Grade B

Burns, Trauma and mixed ICU patients

1 RCT (Jones mixed ICU pts)

Peptides

Differences: recommendations

Canadian ADA ASPEN/SCCM

Recommendpolymeric (since no benefit for peptides)

4 RCTs

---------Grade E Use small peptides in diarrhea

1 non RCT

Fibre

Differences: recommendations

Canadian ADA ASPEN/SCCM

Insufficient data

6 RCTs

---------Grade E Use soluble fibre3 RCTs

Grade CAvoid soluble and insoluble fibre for bowel ischemia/severe dysmotility

2 non RCTs (review, case study)

Probiotics

Differences: recommendations

Canadian ADA ASPEN/SCCM

Insufficient data

No benefit in outcomes, potential for harm

12 RCTs

---------Grade CUse in transplant, major abd surgery, severe trauma

Not in necrotizing pancreatitis

5 RCTs (elective sx)

Intensive Insulin Therapy

Differences: recommendations

Canadian ADA ASPEN/SCCM

RecommendTarget around 144 mg/dl (8.0 mmol/L)

Range 120-160 mg/dL(7-9 mmol/L)

Keep < 180 mg/dL (10 mmol/L) in all

Most recent meta- analyses includes NICE SUGAR

Strong Medical: 80-110 mg/dL (4.4-6.1 mmol/L)

BEING UPDATED 2009

Grade BModerate strict control

Grade E110-150 mg/dL(6.1-8.3 mmol/L)

Similarities?

Topic Canadian ADA ASPEN/SCCM

Use of EN over PN

Start EN within 24-48 hr

EN Fish Oils -----

CHO/Fat Insufficient ----- Insufficient

Body position (45) (45)

Small bowel vs. gastric

Continuous vs. other insufficient ---- High risk (D)

PN vs std care Not be used ---- Not for 7 days

Type of IV lipids No soy based ---- No soy based

PN Glutamine ----

Low dose of PN ----

AOX/vits/minerals ----

ADOPT NOW!

Slight difference in strength

Enteral Nutrition over Parenteral NutritionCanadians and ADA: StrongestASPEN/SCCM: second strongest

Feeding ProtocolsCanadians and ASPEN/SCCM: weaker recommendationADA: none for feeding protocol per se, but for GRV : expert opinion

EN plus PNCanadian: recommend NOT be used until strategies to maximize EN adoptedASPEN/SCCM: not be started for 7 -10 days (grade C)

Blue DyeASPEN/SCCM : not recommendADA : do not recommend but highest level of evidence

Differences exist between the guidelines:

– Populations

– Levels of evidence: not enough RCTs so tendency to make a recommendation

– Time frames of literature searches and updates

– Recommendations: due to interpretation of the evidence, lack of transparency

Similarities in many of the recommendations

Conclusions

Similarities should be adopted without hesitation

Differences

Define critically ill patient

Transparency needed (websites)

Harmonize between societies

Practitioner: right recommendation for the right person

Implications

JPEN Nov 2010:625-643

Ahhh…..Harmonized Guidelines!

Thank You!

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