Overview
This study is to compare the sustained post-discharge nutritional support to reach individual energy and protein goals to usual care home nutrition in medical patients at nutritional risk.
Description
Malnutrition is a strong and independent long-term risk factor for mortality, rehospitalisation and functional decline, particularly in the elderly, polymorbid medical patient population. The randomized-controlled Effect of early nutritional support on Frailty, Functional Outcomes and Recovery of malnourished medical inpatients Trial (EFFORT, Lancet 2019) included 2028 patients in eight Swiss hospitals and found that nutritional support during the inhospital stay reduces very efficiently the risk for complications and mortality with numbers needed to treat (NNT) of 23 and 37, respectively.
Yet, the nutritional intervention was not continued after hospital discharge of patients and long-term follow-up data of patients showed a lack of sustained effect of the initial nutritional support strategy. There is a current lack of trial data investigating whether long-term use of nutritional support has a sustained effect on clinical outcomes in this patient population. This study is to compare the continuous use of nutritional support with the use of approved oral nutritional supplements to reach protein and energy goals and to analyze whether medical patients at nutritional risk show a sustained benefit from long-term nutritional support after hospital discharge, and why and how nutritional support affects the course of disease from a mechanistic physio-pathological standpoint.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Informed Consent as documented by signature
- Adult (age ≥18 years), medical patients
- Nutritional risk screening using the Nutritional Risk Screening (NRS): total score ≥3 points consisting of ≥1 points for impairment of the nutritional status [weight loss >5% in 3 month or food intake of 50-75% in the last week before hospital admission] plus ≥1 for the severity of the disease (i.e., cancer, chronic kidney disease, chronic heart failure, COPD) and other chronic diseases according to the definition of the "National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion": Chronic diseases are defined broadly as conditions that last 1 year or more and require ongoing medical attention or limit activities of daily living or both .
Exclusion Criteria:
- after surgery
- unable to ingest oral nutrition
- need for long-term nutrition,
- terminal condition
- acute pancreatitis or acute liver failure
- patients discharged to a nursing home
- patients unlikely to comply with nutritional support treatment (e.g., dementia)
- COVID-Hospitalisation requiring intensive care