Title: REDOX: A secondary analysis What did we learn?
1REDOX A secondary analysisWhat did we learn?
- Daren K. Heyland MD
- Professor of MedicineQueens University,
Kingston, ON Canada - On behalf of the REDOXS Study Investigators
2Disclosures
- Research grants and speaking honorarium from
Fresenius Kabi, biosyn, Baxter, Abbott and Nestle - None of these companies have a decisional role in
the conception, design, conduct, analysis,
interpretation of results or decision to publish.
3A RANDOMIZED TRIAL OF HIGH-DOSE GLUTAMINE AND
ANTIOXIDANTS IN CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS WITH
MULTIORGAN FAILURE Â The REDOXS study
- Daren K. Heyland MD
- Professor of MedicineQueens University,
Kingston, ON Canada - On behalf of the REDOXS Study Investigators
N Engl J Med 20133681489-97.
4The REDOXS study
antioxidants
Factorial 2x2 design Double blind treatment
glutamine
R
1200 ICU patients
R
Concealed Stratified by site
placebo
Evidence of
Multi-organ failure
antioxidants
R
placebo
placebo
5The Research Protocol
Inclusion Criteria
- Adults (gt18)
- With 2 or more organ failures related to their
acute illness - Requiring mechanically ventilation (P/Flt300)
- Clinical evidence of hypoperfusion defined by
need for vasopressor agents for more than 2 hour - Renal dysfunction Crgt171 or lt500ml/24 hrs
- platelet lt 50
-
6Optimizing the Dose of Glutamine Dipeptides and
Antioxidants In Critically Ill PatientsA Phase
I dose finding study
Parenterally Enterally
Glutamine/day 0.35 gms/kg 30 gms
Antioxidants per day 500 mcg Selenium Vit C 1500 mg Vit E 500 mg B carotene 10 mg Zinc 20 mg Se 300 ug
- High dose appears safe
- High dose associated with
- no worsening of SOFA Scores
- greater resolution of oxidative stress
- greater preservation of glutathione
- Improved mitochondrial function
Heyland JPEN Mar 2007
7Primary outcome of 28 day mortality using all
1218 evaluable patients (ITT)
  Antioxidants (AOX) Antioxidants (AOX)  Â
  Yes No AOX OR conditioned on Glut Overall adjusted OR of AOX
Yes 101/310 (32.6) 97/301 (32.2) 1.02 (0.72, 1.43) 1.09 (0.86-1.40 p0.48)
No 89/307 (29.0) 76/309 (25.3) 1.20 (0.84, 1.72) 1.09 (0.86-1.40 p0.48)
Glut OR conditioned on AOX 1.18 (0.83-1.66) 1.40 (0.98-2.00)
Overall adjusted OR for glut 1.28 (1.00-1.64 p0.049) 1.28 (1.00-1.64 p0.049) AOX by glut interactionp0.49
 Overall adjusted OR for glut 1.28 (1.00-1.64 p0.049) 1.28 (1.00-1.64 p0.049) AOX by glut interactionp0.49
ORodds ratio. ORs are presented with 95 confidence intervals in parentheses. An ORgt1 indicates increased mortality with treatment. ORodds ratio. ORs are presented with 95 confidence intervals in parentheses. An ORgt1 indicates increased mortality with treatment. ORodds ratio. ORs are presented with 95 confidence intervals in parentheses. An ORgt1 indicates increased mortality with treatment. ORodds ratio. ORs are presented with 95 confidence intervals in parentheses. An ORgt1 indicates increased mortality with treatment. ORodds ratio. ORs are presented with 95 confidence intervals in parentheses. An ORgt1 indicates increased mortality with treatment. ORodds ratio. ORs are presented with 95 confidence intervals in parentheses. An ORgt1 indicates increased mortality with treatment.
All odds ratios adjust for presence of shock at baseline. Overall ORs also adjust for other treatment factor. To account for the two interim analyses, we pre-specified statistical significance of the final analysis at a two-sided plt0.044 in our protocol. Thus, our primary outcome did not reach statistical significance for either intervention. All odds ratios adjust for presence of shock at baseline. Overall ORs also adjust for other treatment factor. To account for the two interim analyses, we pre-specified statistical significance of the final analysis at a two-sided plt0.044 in our protocol. Thus, our primary outcome did not reach statistical significance for either intervention. All odds ratios adjust for presence of shock at baseline. Overall ORs also adjust for other treatment factor. To account for the two interim analyses, we pre-specified statistical significance of the final analysis at a two-sided plt0.044 in our protocol. Thus, our primary outcome did not reach statistical significance for either intervention. All odds ratios adjust for presence of shock at baseline. Overall ORs also adjust for other treatment factor. To account for the two interim analyses, we pre-specified statistical significance of the final analysis at a two-sided plt0.044 in our protocol. Thus, our primary outcome did not reach statistical significance for either intervention. All odds ratios adjust for presence of shock at baseline. Overall ORs also adjust for other treatment factor. To account for the two interim analyses, we pre-specified statistical significance of the final analysis at a two-sided plt0.044 in our protocol. Thus, our primary outcome did not reach statistical significance for either intervention. All odds ratios adjust for presence of shock at baseline. Overall ORs also adjust for other treatment factor. To account for the two interim analyses, we pre-specified statistical significance of the final analysis at a two-sided plt0.044 in our protocol. Thus, our primary outcome did not reach statistical significance for either intervention.
Glutamine(glut)
N Engl J Med 20133681489-97.
8Mortality Outcomes
P0.02
P0.02
P0.049
P0.07
Note all P values pertain to GLN vs No GLN no
significant differences between AOX vs. No AOX
9Pre-specified Sub-group AnalysisGlutamine vs. No
Glutamine
28 day mortality, OR with 95 CI)
10Other Clinical Outcomes
- No differences between groups
- SOFA
- Need for dialysis
- Duration of mechanical ventilation
- PODS
- infections
- ICU and Hospital LOS
11Plasma Levels of Glutamine in Subset of Patients
P lt0.001
12Plasma Levels of Selenium in Subset of Patients
P lt0.001
13Post-hoc Secondary Analyses
14Letter to NEJM
- Major concerns in this study are the
statistical adjustment of combining the glutamine
groups, showing an imbalance in baseline
variables. The number of patients with more than
two failing organs at baseline was much higher in
the new defined glutamine group compared to the
group without glutamine (n187 vs. n148
respectively), obviously resulting in higher
mortality... In conclusion, we suggest that more
severely ill patients were allocated to the
glutamine groups as a result of randomization
error and patients were not adequately fed. This
may explain the observed higher mortality in the
new defined glutamine group. Complementary data
is needed to support the scientific value of this
study.
by Buijs NEJM 2013
15Adjusted Analysis
Imbalance in organ failures at baseline?
16Kaplan-Meier Survival Curve by Treatment Arm
17Adjusted Analysis
- The 28-day mortality rates in the placebo,
glutamine, antioxidant and combination groups
were 25, 32, 29 and 33 respectively. - Compared to placebo, the unadjusted OR (95 CI)
of mortality was Glutamine 1.4 (1.0-2.0, P
0.063), - Antioxidant 1.2 (0.8-1.7, P 0.31),
- Both 1.4 (1.0-2.0, P0.049).
- After adjusting for all statistically significant
baseline characteristics, the corresponding
adjusted ORs remained virtually unchanged at - Glutamine 1.4 (1.0-2.1, P 0.054)
- Antioxidant 1.2(0.8-1.8, P 0.34)
- Both 1.4 (0.9-2.0, P 0.10)
18Selected Subgroup Analyses
   OR (95 CI) compared to placebo OR (95 CI) compared to placebo OR (95 CI) compared to placebo P-values
Subgroup Subgroup Deaths/n () GLN alone AOX alone GLNAOX Â
Overall Overall     Â
  363/1218 (30) 1.40 (0.98-2.00) 1.20 (0.84-1.72) 1.42 (1.00-2.03)
Study Setting Study Setting     Â
Region Region     0.37
Canada 303/1044 (29) 1.41 (0.96-2.07) 1.14 (0.77-1.67) 1.29 (0.88-1.89)
USA 44/131 (34) 1.56 (0.51-4.81) 1.43 (0.47-4.38) 3.43 (1.17-10.07)
Europe 16/43 (37) 0.86 (0.12-5.9) 2.40 (0.39-14.88) 0.89 (0.14-5.48)
Baseline Patient Characteristics Baseline Patient Characteristics Baseline Patient Characteristics    Â
Admission category Admission category     0.52
Surgical 59/255 (23) 2.16 (0.91-5.15) 1.94 (0.78-4.82) 1.58 (0.67-3.76)
Medical 304/963 (32) 1.28 (0.87-1.89) 1.08 (0.73-1.60) 1.43 (0.97-2.12)
Cancer patients Cancer patients     0.74
No 297/1048 (28) 1.48 (1.01-2.18) 1.15 (0.77-1.71) 1.42 (0.97-2.10)
Yes 66/170 (39) 1.05 (0.41-2.73) 1.43 (0.60-3.40) 1.38 (0.58-3.27)
Etiology of Shock Etiology of Shock     0.71
Cardiogenic 74/240 (31) 1.24 (0.56-2.79) 1.62 (0.75-3.51) 2.19 (1.03-4.67)
Septic 256/826 (31) 1.43 (0.93-2.19) 1.06 (0.69-1.63) 1.21 (0.79-1.86)
Other/Unkown/None 33/152 (22) 1.45 (0.46-4.57) 1.45 (0.43-4.86) 1.83 (0.60-5.78)
Vasopressors Vasopressors     0.37
lt15 mcg/min 162/595 (27) 1.58 (0.92-2.70) 1.66 (0.97-2.84) 1.50 (0.87-2.58)
gt15 mcg/min 201/623 (32) 1.32 (0.82-2.13) 0.92 (0.57-1.51) 1.39 (0.87-2.22)
Renal dysfunction Renal dysfunction     0.035
No 216/776 (28) 0.93 (0.59-1.46) 0.90 (0.58-1.40) 1.14 (0.74-1.77)
Yes 147/442 (33) 2.75 (1.50-5.03) 2.16 (1.15-4.07) 2.15 (1.17-3.94)
OR-odds ratio CI-confidence interval GLN-Glutamine AOX-antioxidants OR-odds ratio CI-confidence interval GLN-Glutamine AOX-antioxidants OR-odds ratio CI-confidence interval GLN-Glutamine AOX-antioxidants OR-odds ratio CI-confidence interval GLN-Glutamine AOX-antioxidants OR-odds ratio CI-confidence interval GLN-Glutamine AOX-antioxidants OR-odds ratio CI-confidence interval GLN-Glutamine AOX-antioxidants OR-odds ratio CI-confidence interval GLN-Glutamine AOX-antioxidants
19Additional Subgroup Analyses
- Age
- BMI
- Comorbidities
- Diabetes
- Number of organ failures
Subgroup analyses based on variable occurring
post randomization not valid
20Examination of Treatment Effect by Baseline Renal
Dysfunction and Post-Baseline Dialysis
Multivariable Subgroup Multivariable Subgroup OR (95 CI) Compared To Placebo Arm OR (95 CI) Compared To Placebo Arm OR (95 CI) Compared To Placebo Arm
Renal Dysfunction Ever On Dialysis deaths/n () GLN alone AOX alone GLNAOX
No No 158/634 (25) 1.1 (0.6-1.8) 1.1 (0.6-1.8) 1.3 (0.8-2.2)
No Yes 58/142 (41) 0.4 (0.2-1.2) 0.5 (0.2-1.3) 0.6 (0.3-1.6)
Yes No 76/240 (32) 3.9 (1.7-9.0) 3.3 (1.4-7.8) 1.6 (0.7-3.8)
Yes Yes 71/202 (35) 1.8 (0.7-4.4) 1.4 (0.6-3.5) 3.1 (1.2-7.6)
OR-odds ratio CI-confidence interval GLN-glutamine AOX-antioxidants OR-odds ratio CI-confidence interval GLN-glutamine AOX-antioxidants OR-odds ratio CI-confidence interval GLN-glutamine AOX-antioxidants OR-odds ratio CI-confidence interval GLN-glutamine AOX-antioxidants OR-odds ratio CI-confidence interval GLN-glutamine AOX-antioxidants
Cells in bold indicate treatment arm had significantly higher 28 day mortality than placebo at plt0.05. Cells in bold indicate treatment arm had significantly higher 28 day mortality than placebo at plt0.05. Cells in bold indicate treatment arm had significantly higher 28 day mortality than placebo at plt0.05. Cells in bold indicate treatment arm had significantly higher 28 day mortality than placebo at plt0.05. Cells in bold indicate treatment arm had significantly higher 28 day mortality than placebo at plt0.05. Cells in bold indicate treatment arm had significantly higher 28 day mortality than placebo at plt0.05.
21Discussion
- Increased harm associated with glutamine
administration have persisted despite adjustment
for random imbalances in baseline covariates. - In both the pooled analysis where both
glutamine-receiving groups were combined or
whether considering the effect of glutamine alone
vs. placebo, we confirm a trend towards increased
mortality and 28 days and a significant increase
in 6-month mortality associated with glutamine
administration. - Our unadjusted subgroup analysis showed that the
trend for a harmful glutamine effect existed
among the 879 patients with 2 organ failures but
also among the 335 patients with 3 or 4 organ
failures. - Thus, the random imbalance in the number of organ
failures across groups does not affect our main
inference that high-dose glutamine
supplementation was not beneficial, and perhaps
harmful.
22Conclusions
- Glutamine and antioxidants at doses studied in
this study do not improve clinical outcomes in
critically ill patients with multi-organ failure - Glutamine may be harmful
- For both glutamine and antioxidants, the greatest
signal of harm was in patients with multi-organ
failure that included renal dysfunction upon
study enrollment. - Patients with multi-organ failure not uniformly
associated with low plasma glutamine levels
23Experimental Diet enriched with Glutamine, AOX,
and Omega 3 FFAs
GLN-enriched EN
A van Zanten, unpublished data
24Experimental Diet enriched with Glutamine, AOX,
and Omega 3 FFAs
GLN-enriched EN
GLN-enriched EN
A van Zanten, unpublished data
25GLN-enriched EN
GLN-enriched EN
GLN-enriched EN
A van Zanten, unpublished data
26Future Trials Require Bedside Testing?
27Where does that leave Glutamine?
28Updated Meta-analysis of IV Glutamine (n28 RCTs)
Overall Mortality
Note Does not include EN GLN studies nor
REDOXS study
RR0.87 (0.75,1.02) P0.08
In press Critical Care
29Updated Meta-analysis of IV Glutamine (n28 RCTs)
Hospital Mortality
RR0.68 (0.51,0.89) P 0.005
In press Critical Care
30Updated Meta-analysis of IV Glutamine (n28 RCTs)
Influence of the number of study sites involved
in the trial
Hospital Mortality
In press Critical Care
31Updated Meta-analysis of IV Glutamine (n28 RCTs)
Infection
RR0.86 (0.73,1.03) P0.10
32Updated Meta-analysis of IV Glutamine (n28 RCTs)
ICU Length of Stay
Note Does not include EN GLN studies nor REDOXS
study
33Updated Meta-analysis of IV Glutamine (n28 RCTs)
Hospital Length of Stay
WMD-2.42 (-4.60, -0.24) P0.03
34- Double-blind, multicenter RCT
- 142 trauma patients (excluded renal failure)
- 0.5 gm/kg of Ala-Gln dipeptide x 5 days unrelated
to PN vs. saline placebo (pharmaconutrition) - Overall, no effect on infection (primary
endpoint), LOS, or mortality - No effect in subgroup of severe trauma (ISSgt24)
- Of treated patients, 39 had low plasma levels at
END of treatment day 6 levels associated with
worse outcomes
35Pre-specified subgroup in patients with low basal
levels of glutamine
Perez-Barcena ICM 2014
36Canadian Nutrition CPGs IV Glutamine
- Recommendation
- When parenteral nutrition is prescribed to
critically ill patients, parenteral
supplementation with glutamine should be
considered. - However, we strongly recommend that glutamine NOT
be used in critically ill patients with
multi-organ failure. - here are insufficient data to generate
recommendations for intravenous glutamine in
critically ill patients receiving enteral
nutrition.
downgraded from strongly recommend
37Canadian Nutrition CPGs EN Glutamine
- No new studies since 2009
- Conclusions are
- 1) Glutamine supplemented enteral nutrition may
be associated with a reduction in mortality in
burn patients, but inconclusive in other
critically ill patients. - 2) Glutamine supplemented enteral nutrition may
be associated with a reduction in infectious
complications in burn and trauma patients. - 3) Glutamine supplemented enteral nutrition is
associated with a significant reduction in
hospital length of stay in burn and trauma
patients. - Recommendation
Enteral glutamine should be considered in burn
and trauma patients. There are insufficient data
to support the routine use of enteral glutamine
in other critically ill patients.
warning against use in multi-organ failure
38Canadian Nutrition CPGs Combined IV EN
Glutamine
- Recommendation
- Based on one level 1 study (REDOXS), we strongly
recommend that high dose combined parenteral and
enteral glutamine supplementation NOT be used in
critically ill patients with multi-organ failure.
39 Is the patient in shock or have multi-organ
failure, particularly renal failure?
Do not give any glutamine, neither EN or PN
No
Yes
Is EN possible?
Yes
No
Patient is PN dependent
Is the patient Burns? Trauma?
Yes
No
Give IV Glutamine 0.35 gm/kg/day as long as they
are on PN
Do not give glutamine
Give EN Glutamine 0.35-0.5 gm/kg/day as long as
they are on EN
40(No Transcript)
41Questions?