Publications by authors named "Ines Verlinden"

Background: Altered DNA-methylation affects biological ageing in adults and developmental processes in children. DNA-methylation is altered by environmental factors, trauma and illnesses. We hypothesised that paediatric critical illness, and the nutritional management in the paediatric intensive care unit (PICU), affects DNA-methylation changes that underly the developmental processes of childhood ageing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Critically ill children requiring intensive care suffer from impaired physical/neurocognitive development 2 y later, partially preventable by omitting early use of parenteral nutrition (early-PN) in the paediatric intensive-care-unit (PICU). Altered methylation of DNA from peripheral blood during PICU-stay provided a molecular basis hereof. Whether DNA-methylation of former PICU patients, assessed 2 y after critical illness, is different from that of healthy children remained unknown.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Many critically ill children face long-term developmental impairments. The PEPaNIC trial attributed part of the problems at the level of neurocognitive and emotional/behavioral development to early use of parenteral nutrition (early-PN) in the PICU, as compared with withholding it for 1 week (late-PN). Insight in long-term daily life physical functional capacity after critical illness is limited.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - The PEPaNIC trial found that early administration of supplemental parenteral nutrition (early-PN) in critically ill children led to long-term emotional and behavioral issues, assessed four years later, compared to delaying nutrition (late-PN) for one week.
  • - A study of 403 patients from the trial revealed that changes in DNA methylation at 37 specific CpG-sites due to early-PN could statistically account for the observed negative emotional and behavioral outcomes.
  • - The findings suggest that abnormal DNA methylation caused by early-PN is a biological mechanism contributing to its harmful effects on the emotional and behavioral health of critically ill children years after their treatment in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU).
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • A genome-wide study shows that de novo DNA methylation changes in children leaving the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) may affect their long-term development, particularly influenced by early parenteral nutrition (early-PN).
  • Analysis of DNA methylation in matched groups of early-PN and late-PN patients revealed significant differences over time, with altered methylation patterns observed on days 3, 5, and 7 post-admission.
  • The study found that critical illness and the timing of nutritional support impact DNA methylation, with substantial changes occurring rapidly, indicating early-PN patients exhibited differential methylation patterns compared to those who received late-PN.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background & Aims: Early use of parenteral nutrition (early-PN), as compared with withholding it for one week (late-PN), in the PICU, has shown to slow down recovery from critical illness and impair long-term development of 6 neurocognitive/behavioural/emotional functions assessed 2 years later. Given that key steps in brain maturation occur at different times during childhood, we hypothesised that age at time of exposure determines long-term developmental impact of early-PN.

Methods: The 786 children who were neurocognitively tested 2 years after participation in the PEPaNIC-RCT were included in this study.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The PEPaNIC randomised controlled trial, which recruited 1440 critically ill infants and children in 2012-15, showed that withholding parenteral nutrition for 1 week (late-parenteral nutrition), compared with early supplementation within 24 h of admission to the paediatric intensive care unit (early-parenteral nutrition), prevented infections, accelerated recovery, and improved neurocognitive development assessed 2 years later. Because several neurocognitive domains can only be thoroughly assessed from age 4 years onwards, we aimed to determine the effect of late-parenteral nutrition versus early-parenteral nutrition on physical, neurocognitive, and emotional and behavioural development 4 years after randomisation.

Methods: This is a preplanned, blinded, 4-year follow-up study of participants included in the PEPaNIC trial (done at University Hospitals Leuven, Belgium; Erasmus Medical Centre Sophia Children's Hospital, Rotterdam, Netherlands; and Stollery Children's Hospital, Edmonton, AB, Canada) and of matched healthy children.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Early use of parenteral nutrition in the paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) negatively affects development of executive functions, externalising behaviour, and visual-motor integration 2 years later, compared with omitting parenteral nutrition until PICU day 8 (late parenteral nutrition). The molecular basis of this finding is uncertain. We aimed to test the hypothesis that DNA methylation changes occur during critical illness and that early parenteral nutrition (or a specific macronutrient component hereof) contributes to these changes, which could explain its negative effects on neurocognitive development.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In critically ill children admitted to pediatric intensive care units (PICUs), enteral nutrition (EN) is often delayed due to gastrointestinal dysfunction or interrupted. Since a macronutrient deficit in these patients has been associated with adverse outcomes in observational studies, supplemental parenteral nutrition (PN) in PICUs has long been widely advised to meeting nutritional requirements. However, uncertainty of timing of initiation, optimal dose and composition of PN has led to a wide variation in previous guidelines and current clinical practices.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF