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A.S.P.E.N. Enteral Nutrition Practice Recommendations

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Nasojejunal route for enteral feedings in ICU patients are not required unless gastric feeding intolerance is present ... Check metabolic and nutrition parameters, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A.S.P.E.N. Enteral Nutrition Practice Recommendations


1
A.S.P.E.N. Enteral Nutrition Practice
Recommendations
  • Kelly Tappenden, PhD, RD
  • Professor of Gastrointestinal Physiology
    Nutrition
  • University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

2
(No Transcript)
3
Outline
  1. Introduction
  2. Ordering and Labelling of EN
  3. Enteral Formula (Medical Foods) and Infant
    Formula Regulation
  4. Water and Enteral Formula Safety and Stability
  5. Enteral Access
  6. EN Administration
  7. Medication Administration
  8. Monitoring EN Administration
  9. Summary

4
Glossary of Terms
  • Beyond-Use Date
  • Clinical Guidelines
  • Closed Enteral System
  • Computerized Prescriber Order Entry (CPOE)
  • Distilled Water
  • Drug-Nutrient Interactions
  • Enteral Access Devices
  • Enteral Misconnection
  • Enteral Nutrition (EN)
  • Expiration Date
  • Fore Milk
  • Hang Time
  • Hind Milk
  • Medical Food
  • Modular Enteral Feeding
  • Open Enteral System
  • Purified Water
  • Sentinel Event
  • Tap Water
  • Transitional Feeding

5
Objective/Goal/Methodology
  • Objective establish evidence-based practice
    guidelines following review of literature related
    to ordering, preparation, delivery, and
    monitoring of EN
  • Goal identify safety issues related to EN
  • Grading system modified Agency for Healthcare
    Research and Quality (AHRQ) method
  • GOOD research-based evidence to support guideline
    (PRCTs).
  • FAIR research-based evidence to support guideline
    (well-designed studies w/out randomization).
  • The guideline is based on EXPERT OPINION and
    EDITORIAL CONSENSUS.

6
Formulary Selection Process
  • 1. Facilities should establish a formulary
    specific and available EN formulas. (C)
  • 2. A specific EN formulary should be based on
    patient population and estimated nutrient needs
    rather than specific diagnosis. (C)
  • 3. A clinician with expertise in nutrition
    support should be involved in corporate buying
    of EN products that best meets the patients
    nutrient requirements. (C)

7
Use standardized order forms specific for adult
and pediatric EN regimens (C)
EN orders should include (C)1) patient info
2) formula 3) enteral access site/device4)
administration method/rate
All orders, evenre-orders, must be complete! (C)
Incorporate EN advancement, transitional,
monitoring and ancillary orders.(C)
Use generic terms, avoid abbreviations(C)
8
Labels for EN formula administration containers,
bags, or syringes should be standardized. (C)
ALL EN labels, in all environments, shall express
clearly and accurately what the patient is
receiving at any time. (C)
Before administration, EN label should be
compared with the EN order for accuracy, hang
time, and beyond-use date. (C)
Clinician-to-clinician communication needed to
promote the accurate EN prescription during
patient transfers. (C)
Clearly label human breast milk with the
patients name/medical record number to prevent
delivery errors. Preprinted labels and/or bar
coding systems helpful. (C)
9
Regulatory Issues
  • Medical food a food which is formulated to be
    consumed or administered enterally under the
    supervision of a physician and which is intended
    for the specific dietary management of a disease
    or condition for which distinctive nutritional
    requirements, based on recognized scientific
    principles, are established by medical
    evaluation.
  • Require good manufacturing practice
  • Exempt from regulations on labeling and health
    claims that apply to conventional foods

BUYER BEWARE!!
10
Eliminate EN Contamination
  • Clean environment (A)
  • Aseptic technique (A)
  • Trained personnel (C)
  • Sterile, liquidgtpowder(A)
  • Controlled storage (B)
  • Follow manufacturer recommendations (B)
  • Disposable gloves (A)
  • Screw cap gt flip top (A)
  • Use recessed spikes (B)
  • Pump with drip chamber (A)
  • Peds products DEHP free (B)

11
Formula Hang Times Vary
1. Institution need ongoing quality control
process for EN formula prep, distribution,
storage, handling, and administration. (B) 2.
Institutions need written policies and procedures
for safe EN formula and HBM prep/handling, as
well as maintain an ongoing surveillance program
for contamination. (B)
12
Selection of Enteral Access Device
  • 1. Select an enteral access device based on
    patient specific factors. (C)
  • 2. Nasojejunal route for enteral feedings in ICU
    patients are not required unless gastric feeding
    intolerance is present. (A)
  • 3. Patients with persistent dysphagia should have
    a long-term enteral access device placed. (B)

13
Insertion of Enteral Access Device
  • 1. Obtain radiographic confirmation of tube
    placement prior to use. (B)
  • 2. Capnography may help prevent improper
    placement when inserting a gastric feeding tube.
    (B)
  • 3. When inserting a small bowel feeding tube,
    observe for a change in pH and appearance of
    aspirates as the tube progresses from the stomach
    to small bowel. (B)
  • 4. Do not rely on the ausculatory method to
    differentiate between gastric and small bowel
    placement. (A)
  • 5. Mark exit site of feeding tube at the time of
    the initial radiograph observe for a change
    during feedings. (B)
  • 6. In pediatrics and neonates, all methods but
    X-ray verification of enteral tube placement have
    been shown to be inaccurate however should be
    used judicious. (B)

14
Longterm Enteral Feeding Devices
  • 1. Considered when EN gt4 wks. (C)
  • 2. Not for premature infants without strong
    justification. (C)
  • 3. Multidisciplinary team should advise re
    placement to ensure (B)
  • a. benefit gt risk of placement
  • b. placement near end of life is warranted or
  • c. insertion is indicated if close to achieving
    oral feeding.
  • 4. Perform abdominal imaging prior to placement.
    (C)
  • 5. Gastrostomy tube placement does not mandate
    fundoplication. (B)
  • 6. Direct placement indicated in patients
    requiring a long-term jejunostomy. (B)
  • 7. Document tube type, tip location, and external
    markings. (C)
  • 8. Avoid placement of catheters or tubes not
    intended for use as enteral feeding devices. (B)

15
When to start feeding following placement?
  • 1. Enteral feedings should be started
    postoperatively in surgical patients without
    waiting for flatus or a bowel movement. The
    current literature indicates that these feedings
    can be initiated within 24-48 hours. (A)
  • 2. A PEG tube may be utilized for feedings within
    several hours of placement current literature
    supports within 2 hours in adults and 6 hours in
    infants and children. (B)

16
Initiation and Advancement of EN
  • 1. Base enteral delivery method and initiation
    and advancement of EN regimens on patient
    condition, age, enteral route (gastric vs small
    bowel), nutrition requirements, and GI status.
    (C)
  • 2. Choose full strength, isotonic formulas for
    initial feeding regimen. (C)
  • 3. Initiation and advancement of enteral formula
    in pediatric patients is best done over several
    days in a hospital setting using a flexible
    nutrition plan. (C)

17
Preterm Infant Considerations
  • 1. For premature infants weighing lt 1500 g and at
    risk for NEC, it is recommended that mothers be
    encouraged to supply breast milk for their
    infants. (A)
  • 2. ELBW and VLBW infants may benefit from minimal
    enteral feeding starting very slowly at 0.5-1
    mL/kg/day and advancing to 20 mL/kg/day. (B)
  • 3. Advance nutritive feedings for VLBW and ELBW
    infants by a rate of 10-20 mL/kg/day. (C)

18
Enteral Feeding Pumps
  1. Feeding pumps should be calibrated periodically
    to assure accuracy. (B)
  2. Accuracy 10 for adults (B) within 5 for peds
    and neonates. (C)
  3. HBM infused at low rates should be administered
    via syringe pump with tip elevated. (C)
  4. Feeding pumps for home use should have features
    that promote safety and minimize sleep
    disturbances. (B)

19
Patient Positioning
  1. Elevate the backrest to gt30º, and preferably to
    45º, for all patients receiving EN unless a
    medical contraindication exists. (A)
  2. Use the reverse Trendelenberg position to elevate
    the HOB, unless contraindicated, when the patient
    cannot tolerate a backrest elevated position. (C)
  3. If necessary to lower the HOB for a procedure or
    a medical contraindication, return the patient to
    an HOB elevated position as soon as feasible. (C)

20
Flushes of feeding tubes
  • 1. Flush with 30 mL water q 4h during continuous
    feeding(A) before/after bolus feedings (A) and
    residual volume measurements (B) in adults.
  • 2. Use lowest volume necessary to clear tube in
    peds and neonates. (C)
  • 3. Sterile water is recommended before/after
    medication administration. (C)
  • 4. Adhere to protocols that call for proper
    flushing of tubes before/after medication
    administration. (B)
  • 5. Use pump when slow rates are required, such as
    with neonates, and respond promptly to pump
    alarms. (C)
  • 6. Use sterile water for tube flushes in
    immunocompromised or critically ill patients. (C)

21
Enteral Misconnections
  • 1. Review current systems/practices for
    misconnect potential. (C)
  • 2. Only allow trained clinicians to reconnect,
    in proper lighting. (C)
  • 3. Do not modify or adapt IV or feeding devices.
    (C)
  • 4. Routinely trace lines back to origins and in
    standardized directions . (C)
  • 5. Recheck connections, trace all tubes in new
    setting/hand-off. (C)
  • 6. Use standardized labels or color-code feeding
    tubes and connectors. (C)
  • 7. Identify and confirm the EN label. (C)
  • Ensure purchasing policies dictate safe products
  • Avoid enteral equip that mates with female luer
    connectors. (C)
  • Dedicated enteral pumps. (C)
  • Enteral feeding sets. (C)
  • Preoper pre-filled EN containers. (C)
  • Oral syringes, instead of luerlock, for enteral
    meds. (C)

22
Medication Administrion
  1. Dont add meds directly to enteral formula (B)
  2. Dont mix meds for EN admin (B)
  3. Administer each med separately in appropriate
    form (B)
  4. Stop feeding ? flush ? med ? flush (A)
  5. Hold EN lt 30 min following med (A)
  6. Use oral/enteral syringes labeled with for oral
    use only to measure/administer enteral meds. (B)
  7. Consult pharmacist for patients who receive
    medications co-administered with EN. (C)

23
Monitor for Refeeding Syndrome
  • 1. Monitor fluid and electrolyte, and other
    metabolic parameters as needed based on the
    patients clinical situation. (B)
  • 2. Check metabolic and nutrition parameters, and
    correct depleted levels prior to the initiation
    of enteral feedings. (B)

24
Monitor Gastric Residual Volumes
  1. With EN, always evaluate aspiration risk. (A)
  2. Assure tube is properly placed before use (A)
  3. Elevate HOB 30-45?(A)
  4. During first 48h, check GRV q 4h (B) may reduce
    to 6-8h thereafter in non-critically ill (C)
  5. If GRV is gt250 mL after 2nd check, consider
    prokinetic agent in adults (A)
  6. If GRV is gt500 mL, hold EN ? thoroughly reassess
    patient tolerance (B)
  7. If GRV is consistently gt500 mL, consider tube
    below loT (B)
  8. In peds, check GRVs every 4h, hold if residual gt
    hourly rate. If bolus, check before next feed
    and hold if GRV gt50 of previous volume. (C)

25
Conclusions
  • EN is also complex and safety is critically
    important
  • PRCTs are needed
  • Implications for safe EN practices extend far
    beyond those providing the nutrition support
  • Strong communication is essential
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