A Randomized Trial of Glutamine and Antioxidants in Critically Ill Patients
Kingston General Hospital · University of Colorado Denver · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Critically ill patients have considerable oxidative stress. Glutamine and antioxidant supplementation may offer therapeutic benefit, although current data are conflicting.
In this blinded 2-by-2 factorial trial, we randomly assigned 1223 critically ill adults in 40 intensive care units (ICUs) in Canada, the United States, and Europe who had multiorgan failure and were receiving mechanical ventilation to receive supplements of glutamine, antioxidants, both, or placebo. Supplements were started within 24 hours after admission to the ICU and were provided both intravenously and enterally. The primary outcome was 28-day mortality. Because of the interim-analysis plan, a P value of less than 0.044 at the final analysis was considered to indicate statistical significance.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 79.82
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 19
Authors
9- DKDaren K. HeylandCorresponding
Kingston General Hospital
- JMJohn Muscedere
Kingston General Hospital
- PEPaul E. Wischmeyer
University of Colorado Denver
- DCDeborah Cook
St. Joseph’s Healthcare Hamilton
- GJGwynne Jones
Ottawa Hospital
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Glutamine
- Odds ratio
- Confidence interval
- Mechanical ventilation
- Placebo
- Randomized controlled trial
- Interim analysis
- Good health and well-being