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Anabolic Effects of Intraoperative Feeding in Reconstruction Surgery

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Fasting
Hyperglycemia Stress
Complication,Postoperative
Feeding, Time Restricted
Stress-related Problem
Head and Neck Neoplasms
Catabolic State
Muscle Wasting
Interventions
Dietary Supplement: Enteral nutrition formula
Registration Number
NCT04266015
Lead Sponsor
E-DA Hospital
Brief Summary

Perioperative fasting remains a common clinical practice in surgical patients to prevent the development of postoperative anesthesia- and surgical-related complications. Clinical observational studies indicated that the combination catabolic effects resulted from prolonged perioperative fasting and profound surgical stress are likely to induce extensive protein catabolism, muscle breakdown and impaired glycemic control during postoperative phase, leading to the development of severe complications. Furthermore, prolonged gastrointestinal fasting is associated with microbial translocation that deteriorates the early recovery after surgery. This clinical trial anticipates in determining the beneficial effect of intraoperative feeding to improve intraoperative hemodynamics and enhance postoperative recovery due to attenuation of systemic catabolism and improvement of insulin sensitivity to glycemic control.

Detailed Description

Perioperative fasting remains a common clinical practice in surgical patients, aiming to prevent pulmonary aspiration during anesthesia induction, improve bowel preparation, and ameliorate the development of postoperative nausea/vomiting or other surgical-related complications. Major head-and-neck tumor excision and reconstruction surgery is one of the most time-consuming surgeries that usually takes more than 12 h to complete. In addition to the preoperative fasting and postoperative recovery time periods, most of these patients will be fasted for more than 24-36 h before they are fed via nasogastric tubes in the postoperative care units. The combination catabolic effects resulted from prolonged perioperative fasting and profound surgical stress are likely to induce extensive protein catabolism, muscle breakdown and impaired glycemic control during postoperative phase. These catabolic responses may lead to the development of post-operative surgical site infection, delayed wound healing, re-intervention, cardiac arrest, and death in diabetic and non-diabetic patients. Furthermore, prolonged gastrointestinal fasting is associated with dehydration, perturbed gut integrity/permeability (leaky gut) and microbial (bacterial) translocation that deteriorates the early recovery after reconstruction surgery. The aim of this clinical trial is to test the effect of intraoperative feeding in patients receiving head-and-neck tumor excision and reconstruction surgery, and anticipate that reduction of perioperative fasting time may improve intraoperative hemodynamics and enhance postoperative recovery due to attenuation of systemic catabolism and improvement of insulin sensitivity to glycemic control.

This single-center clinical trial will be undertaken in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled fashion, in which patients with advanced head-and-neck tumor who are scheduled for extended tumor resection and free-flap reconstruction will be randomly assigned to receive control (no intraoperative feeding) or intraoperative feeding group. Feeding via the nasogastric (NG) tube will start after the establishment of tracheostomy and completion of tumor resection at fusion rate of 10-30 ml/h (feeding diet 1 Kcal/ml and 0.04 g protein/ml). This trial anticipates in detecting differences in intraoperative hemodynamic stability and development of major postoperative complications, including delayed wound healing, surgical site infections and insulin-resistant hyperglycemia between controls and intraoperative feeding group. The outcomes of this clinical trial may provide fundamental evidence for vigorous enteric nutrition and energy support during prolonged high surgical stress operation.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
60
Inclusion Criteria
  • Advanced head-and-neck cancer
  • Requires radical resection, tracheostomy and free flap reconstruction surgery
Exclusion Criteria
  • Anticipated total operation time < 6h
  • Emergency operation
  • Bowel obstruction
  • Starts nasogastric feeding before operation

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Intraoperative feeding groupEnteral nutrition formulaPatients assigned to intraoperative feeding group will receive enteral nutrition formula via the nasogastric tube during operation
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Number of participants that have reconstruction flap failure after operation7 days after free flap reconstruction

The definition of flap failure includes vascular occlusion of flap, surgical wound infection or poor healing that requires surgical reintervention

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Number of participants that have perioperative complicationsStart of free flap reconstruction surgery to 28 days after operation

The definition of composite perioperative complications during and after operation, include intraoperative hemodynamic stability (hypotension and requirement of inotropes), postoperative insulin sensitivity, glycemic control, skeletal muscle wasting, inflammatory cytokine profiles, length of hospital stay, re-intervention, other postoperative complications, mortality during hospital stay

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

E-Da Hospital

🇨🇳

Yanchao, Kaohsiung, Taiwan

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