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Impact of Fiber-Based Enteral Nutrition on the Gut Microbiome of ICU Patients Receiving Broad-Spectrum Antibiotics: A Randomized Pilot Trial

Daniel E. Freedberg, Megan R. Messina, Elissa Lynch, Monika Tess, Elizabeth Miracle, David H. Chong, Romina Wahab, Julian A. Abrams, Harris H. Wang, Christian Munck

2020Critical Care Explorations20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Objectives: Dietary fiber increases the abundance of bacteria that metabolize fiber into short-chain fatty acids and confers resistance against gut colonization with multidrug-resistant bacteria. This pilot trial estimated the effect of fiber on gut short-chain fatty acid–producing bacteria in the ICU. Design: Randomized, controlled, open label trial. Setting: Medical ICU. Patients: Twenty ICU adults receiving broad-spectrum IV antibiotics for sepsis. Intervention: 1:1 randomization to enteral nutrition with mixed soy- and oat-derived fiber (14.3 g fiber/L) versus calorie- and micronutrient-identical enteral nutrition with 0 g/L fiber. Measurements: Rectal swabs and whole stools were collected at baseline and on study Days 3, 7, 14, and 30. The primary outcome was within-individual change in the cumulative relative abundance of short-chain fatty acid–producing taxa from baseline to Day 3 based on 16S sequencing of rectal swabs. The secondary outcome was Day 3 cumulative short-chain fatty acid levels based on mass spectrometry of whole stools. Analyses were all intent to treat. Main Results: By Day 3, the fiber group received a median of 32.1 g fiber cumulatively (interquartile range, 17.6–54.6) versus 0 g fiber (interquartile range, 0–4.0) in the no fiber group. The median within-individual change in short-chain fatty acid producer relative abundance from baseline to Day 3 was +61% (interquartile range −51 to +1,688) in the fiber group versus −46% (interquartile range, −78 to +13) in the no fiber group ( p = 0.28). Whole stool short-chain fatty acid levels on Day 3 were a median of 707 μg short-chain fatty acids/g stool (interquartile range, 190–7,265) in the fiber group versus 118 μg short-chain fatty acids/g stool (interquartile range, 22–1,195) in the no fiber group ( p = 0.16). Conclusions: Enteral fiber was associated with nonsignificant trends toward increased relative abundance of short-chain fatty acid–producing bacteria and increased short-chain fatty acid levels among ICU patients receiving broad-spectrum IV antibiotics. Larger studies should be undertaken and our results can be used for effect size estimates.

Topics & Concepts

Interquartile rangeParenteral nutritionMedicineRandomized controlled trialEnteral administrationInternal medicineFatty acidGastroenterologyBiologyBiochemistryClinical Nutrition and GastroenterologyInfant Nutrition and HealthGut microbiota and health
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