Physical, Emotional/Behavioral, and Neurocognitive Developmental Outcomes from 2 to 4 Years after PICU Admission: A Secondary Analysis of the Early Versus Late Parenteral Nutrition Randomized Controlled Trial Cohort∗

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Abstract

OBJECTIVES: PICU patients face long-term developmental impairments, partially attributable to early parenteral nutrition (PN) versus late-PN. We investigated how this legacy and harm by early-PN evolve over time. DESIGN: Preplanned secondary analysis of the multicenter PEPaNIC-RCT (ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01536275) that enrolled 1,440 critically ill children from 2012 to 2015 and its 2- (2014-2018) and 4-year (2016-2019) cross-sectional follow-up studies. SETTING: PICUs of Leuven (Belgium), Rotterdam (The Netherlands), and Edmonton (Canada). PATIENTS: Patients and demographically matched healthy control children that underwent longitudinal assessment for physical/emotional/behavioral/neurocognitive functions at both follow-up time points. INTERVENTIONS: In the PEPaNIC-RCT, patients were randomly allocated to early-PN versus late-PN. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: This within-individual longitudinal study investigated changes in physical/emotional/behavioral/neurocognitive functions from 2 to 4 years after PICU admission for 614 patients (297 early-PN and 317 late-PN, tested at mean ± sd age 5.4 ± 4.2 and 7.3 ± 4.3 yr) and for 357 demographically matched healthy children tested at age 5.6 ± 4.3 and 7.5 ± 4.3 years. We determined within-group time-courses, interaction between time and group, and independent impact of critical illness and early-PN on these time-courses. Most deficits in patients versus healthy children remained prominent over the 2 years (p ≤ 0.01). Deficits further aggravated for height, body mass index, the executive function metacognition, intelligence, motor coordination (alternating/synchronous tapping), and memory learning-index, whereas verbal memory deficits became smaller (working/immediate/delayed memory) (p ≤ 0.05). Adjustment for risk factors confirmed most findings and revealed that patients "grew-into-deficit" for additional executive functions (flexibility/emotional control/total executive functioning) and "grew-out-of-deficit" for additional memory functions (recognition/pictures) (p ≤ 0.05). Time-courses were largely unaffected by early-PN versus late-PN, except for weight loss and limited catch-up for visual-motor integration and alertness in early-PN patients (p ≤ 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: From 2- to 4-year post-PICU admission, developmental impairments remained prominent. Within that time-window, impaired growth in height, executive functioning and intelligence aggravated, and impaired memory and harm by early-PN only partially recovered. Impact on development into adulthood requires further investigation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)580-592
Number of pages13
JournalPediatric Critical Care Medicine
Volume23
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2022

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
Supported, in part, by European Research Council Advanced Grants (AdvG-2012-321670 from the Ideas Program of the European Union seventh framework program and AdvG-2017-785809 from the Horizon2020 program to Dr. Van den Berghe), by the Methusalem program of the Flemish government (through the University of Leuven to Dr. Van den Berghe, METH/08/07 and to Drs. Verlinden and Van den Berghe, METH14/06), by the Institute for Science and Technology, Flanders, Belgium (through the University of Leuven to Dr. Van den Berghe, IWT/070695/TBM, and IWT/150181/TBM), by the Sophia Foundation to Dr. Verbruggen, by the Stichting Agis Zorginnovatie to Dr. Verbruggen, by Nutricia Research B.V. to Dr. Verbruggen, by the Erasmus Trustfonds to Dr. Verbruggen, and by an European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism research grant to Dr. Verbruggen.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. All rights reserved.

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