Two randomized controlled trials conducted in acutely burned patients found clinical benefits with higher carbohydrate (60-65% of total energy), lower fat (12-15%) nutrition, to include faster wound healing, fewer wound infections, decreased hospital stay, and less pneumonia. The primary purpose of this study was to assess whether our change in practice to a higher proportion of carbohydrates (60%) with 25% of energy from protein, and 15% of energy from fat was associated with improved wound healing rates. Secondary outcomes evaluated included invasive fungal wound infections, ischemic bowel, sepsis, and mortality. Before February 2022, the use of a high-protein, relatively low-fat enteral formula (52% carbohydrate, 23% fat, 25% protein) combined with a protein modular was the standard practice (PRE-group) in our burn center. After, we implemented a higher carbohydrate feeding protocol (POST-group). In this study, patients in the POST-group were matched 2:1 by age, burn size, burn depth, inhalation injury, and gender to those in the PRE-group. There were 66 patients evaluated: 18% female, 42±13 years of age, burn size of 38±21%TBSA. There was a statistically significant difference in wound healing rates (0.7%±0.5%TBSA/day PRE vs. 1.1%±0.5%TBSA/day POST, p=0.037). There was also significantly less sepsis (70%PRE vs. 41%POST, p=0.021). There were no statistically significant differences between groups in ischemic bowel (0%PRE vs. 4%POST, p=0.159), invasive fungal wound infection rates (14%PRE vs. 5%POST, p=0.245), or mortality (16%PRE, 9%POST; p=0.447). We found a statistically significant increase in wound healing rates when administering a higher proportion of carbohydrate to our patients with severe burns.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/iraf006 | DOI Listing |
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