An intradialytic parenteral nutrition (IDPN) program helps improve serum albumin, body weight, oral intake, and other nutritional indices in haemodialysis (HD) patients with protein-energy wasting (PEW), a recent study has found.
Researchers randomly assigned 38 HD patients (mean age 67.6 years) with PEW status to receive the IDPN intervention (n=18), which included a 3-in-1, fish oil-based parenteral nutrition infused during HD for 3 months, or to the control group (n=20), which received intensive dietary counselling weekly for 3 months. Participants were followed for 3 more months after the intervention.
Three months after enrolment, serum albumin levels showed a significantly higher increase in the IDPN group than in controls (from 3.5 to 3.8 g/dL vs from 3.6 to 3.5 g/dL, respectively; P=0.01). The change in serum albumin remained significantly better in the intervention arm even after adjusting for confounders.
Body weight likewise significantly increased after 3 months of IDPN (59.3 to 61.2 kg; p=0.006), whereas no such change was reported in controls (55.4 to 56.1 kg; p=0.22). A similar effect was reported for body mass index, though it only reached borderline significance (p=0.06).
Oral energy intake jumped by 281.2 kcal/day (p=0.001) at 3 months, while protein intake rose by 8.0 g/day (p=0.03) in the IDPN group. Meanwhile, spontaneous energy intake dropped significantly in controls (p=0.004). These improvements remained stable throughout the subsequent 3-month intervention-free phase.
“A significant improvement in spontaneous oral intake after IDPN supplementation was noted and this might be explained, in part, by changes in appetite-related biomarkers,” the researchers said.