Vietnam National Survey on Parenteral Nutrition Practice in Preterm Neonates: Practice Status, Barriers, and Implications

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Vietnam National Survey on Parenteral Nutrition Practice in Preterm Neonates : Practice Status, Barriers, and Implications. / Nguyen, Thu Tinh; Nguyen, Phan Minh Nhat; Nguyen, Thanh Thien; Nguyen, Pham Minh Tri; Nguyen, Duc Ninh; Vu, Thi Hieu.

In: Cureus, Vol. 16, No. 5, 05.2024, p. e61187.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Nguyen, TT, Nguyen, PMN, Nguyen, TT, Nguyen, PMT, Nguyen, DN & Vu, TH 2024, 'Vietnam National Survey on Parenteral Nutrition Practice in Preterm Neonates: Practice Status, Barriers, and Implications', Cureus, vol. 16, no. 5, pp. e61187. https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.61187

APA

Nguyen, T. T., Nguyen, P. M. N., Nguyen, T. T., Nguyen, P. M. T., Nguyen, D. N., & Vu, T. H. (2024). Vietnam National Survey on Parenteral Nutrition Practice in Preterm Neonates: Practice Status, Barriers, and Implications. Cureus, 16(5), e61187. https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.61187

Vancouver

Nguyen TT, Nguyen PMN, Nguyen TT, Nguyen PMT, Nguyen DN, Vu TH. Vietnam National Survey on Parenteral Nutrition Practice in Preterm Neonates: Practice Status, Barriers, and Implications. Cureus. 2024 May;16(5):e61187. https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.61187

Author

Nguyen, Thu Tinh ; Nguyen, Phan Minh Nhat ; Nguyen, Thanh Thien ; Nguyen, Pham Minh Tri ; Nguyen, Duc Ninh ; Vu, Thi Hieu. / Vietnam National Survey on Parenteral Nutrition Practice in Preterm Neonates : Practice Status, Barriers, and Implications. In: Cureus. 2024 ; Vol. 16, No. 5. pp. e61187.

Bibtex

@article{697a3c1c2d724804ac30682d2f39fba7,
title = "Vietnam National Survey on Parenteral Nutrition Practice in Preterm Neonates: Practice Status, Barriers, and Implications",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Due to high risks of feeding intolerance, preterm infants often receive parenteral nutrition (PN) to ensure sufficient nutrition and energy intake. However, there is a lack of data on the status of clinical PN practice and barriers among neonatal care units in low- to middle-income countries like Vietnam. This extensive survey explores the status and barriers of PN practice for preterm infants in neonatal units across Vietnam and identifies the practical implications of enhancing nutritional outcomes in preterm infants.METHODS: A multicenter nationwide web-based survey on PN practice in preterm infants was conducted across 114 neonatal units from 61 provinces in Vietnam.RESULTS: Among 114 neonatal units receiving a request for surveys, 104 units (91.2%) from 55 provinces participated. Neonatal units were categorized as level I (2/104, 1.9%), II (39/104, 37.5%), III (56/104, 53.8%), and IV (7/104, 6.8%). We found that the initiations of PN within the first hour and the first two hours of life occurred in 80.8% (84/104) and 95.2% (99/104) of the units, respectively. The early provision of amino acids, or AA (within the first day of life) and lipids (within two days of life) were documented by 85% (89/104) and 82% (84/104) of the respondents, respectively. The initial dose of AA ranged from 0.5 to 3 g/kg/day; the dose of AA less than 1 g/kg/day was reported by 7.7% (8/104) of the respondents; the maximum dose of AA ranged from 2 to over 4.5 g/kg/day, with 4 g/kg/day reported by 47.1% (49/104) of the respondents. The initial dose of lipids was between 0.5 and 2 g/kg/day, frequently 1 g/kg/day, reported by 51.9% (54/104) of the respondents; the target lipid dose ranged from 3 to 4 g/kg/day in 93.3% (97/104) respondents; the maximum target dose for lipid was 4 g/kg/day in 36.5% (38/104) of the respondents. The initial glucose dose was distributed as follows: 46.2% of respondents (48/104) administered 4 mg/kg/minute, 21.2% (22/104) used 5 mg/kg/minute, 28.8% (30/104) used 6 mg/kg/minute, and 3.8% (4/104) used 3 mg/kg/minute. Additionally, 48.1% of respondents (50/104) reported a maximum glucose infusion rate above 13 mg/kg/min and 19.2% (20/104) above 15 mg/kg/min. Nineteen percent (20/104) of the respondents reported a lack of micronutrients. Barriers to PN initiation included difficulty in establishing intravenous lines, the absence of standardized protocols, the lack of lipids and micronutrients, infections, and unavailable software supporting neonatologists in calculating nutrition paradigms.CONCLUSION: This study's findings highlight the highly variable PN practice across neonatal units in Vietnam. Deviations from current practical guidelines can be explained by various barriers, most of which are modifiable. A monitoring network for nutritional practice status and a database to track the nutritional outcomes of preterm infants in Vietnam are needed.",
author = "Nguyen, {Thu Tinh} and Nguyen, {Phan Minh Nhat} and Nguyen, {Thanh Thien} and Nguyen, {Pham Minh Tri} and Nguyen, {Duc Ninh} and Vu, {Thi Hieu}",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2024, Nguyen et al.",
year = "2024",
month = may,
doi = "10.7759/cureus.61187",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
pages = "e61187",
journal = "Cureus",
issn = "2168-8184",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Vietnam National Survey on Parenteral Nutrition Practice in Preterm Neonates

T2 - Practice Status, Barriers, and Implications

AU - Nguyen, Thu Tinh

AU - Nguyen, Phan Minh Nhat

AU - Nguyen, Thanh Thien

AU - Nguyen, Pham Minh Tri

AU - Nguyen, Duc Ninh

AU - Vu, Thi Hieu

N1 - Copyright © 2024, Nguyen et al.

PY - 2024/5

Y1 - 2024/5

N2 - BACKGROUND: Due to high risks of feeding intolerance, preterm infants often receive parenteral nutrition (PN) to ensure sufficient nutrition and energy intake. However, there is a lack of data on the status of clinical PN practice and barriers among neonatal care units in low- to middle-income countries like Vietnam. This extensive survey explores the status and barriers of PN practice for preterm infants in neonatal units across Vietnam and identifies the practical implications of enhancing nutritional outcomes in preterm infants.METHODS: A multicenter nationwide web-based survey on PN practice in preterm infants was conducted across 114 neonatal units from 61 provinces in Vietnam.RESULTS: Among 114 neonatal units receiving a request for surveys, 104 units (91.2%) from 55 provinces participated. Neonatal units were categorized as level I (2/104, 1.9%), II (39/104, 37.5%), III (56/104, 53.8%), and IV (7/104, 6.8%). We found that the initiations of PN within the first hour and the first two hours of life occurred in 80.8% (84/104) and 95.2% (99/104) of the units, respectively. The early provision of amino acids, or AA (within the first day of life) and lipids (within two days of life) were documented by 85% (89/104) and 82% (84/104) of the respondents, respectively. The initial dose of AA ranged from 0.5 to 3 g/kg/day; the dose of AA less than 1 g/kg/day was reported by 7.7% (8/104) of the respondents; the maximum dose of AA ranged from 2 to over 4.5 g/kg/day, with 4 g/kg/day reported by 47.1% (49/104) of the respondents. The initial dose of lipids was between 0.5 and 2 g/kg/day, frequently 1 g/kg/day, reported by 51.9% (54/104) of the respondents; the target lipid dose ranged from 3 to 4 g/kg/day in 93.3% (97/104) respondents; the maximum target dose for lipid was 4 g/kg/day in 36.5% (38/104) of the respondents. The initial glucose dose was distributed as follows: 46.2% of respondents (48/104) administered 4 mg/kg/minute, 21.2% (22/104) used 5 mg/kg/minute, 28.8% (30/104) used 6 mg/kg/minute, and 3.8% (4/104) used 3 mg/kg/minute. Additionally, 48.1% of respondents (50/104) reported a maximum glucose infusion rate above 13 mg/kg/min and 19.2% (20/104) above 15 mg/kg/min. Nineteen percent (20/104) of the respondents reported a lack of micronutrients. Barriers to PN initiation included difficulty in establishing intravenous lines, the absence of standardized protocols, the lack of lipids and micronutrients, infections, and unavailable software supporting neonatologists in calculating nutrition paradigms.CONCLUSION: This study's findings highlight the highly variable PN practice across neonatal units in Vietnam. Deviations from current practical guidelines can be explained by various barriers, most of which are modifiable. A monitoring network for nutritional practice status and a database to track the nutritional outcomes of preterm infants in Vietnam are needed.

AB - BACKGROUND: Due to high risks of feeding intolerance, preterm infants often receive parenteral nutrition (PN) to ensure sufficient nutrition and energy intake. However, there is a lack of data on the status of clinical PN practice and barriers among neonatal care units in low- to middle-income countries like Vietnam. This extensive survey explores the status and barriers of PN practice for preterm infants in neonatal units across Vietnam and identifies the practical implications of enhancing nutritional outcomes in preterm infants.METHODS: A multicenter nationwide web-based survey on PN practice in preterm infants was conducted across 114 neonatal units from 61 provinces in Vietnam.RESULTS: Among 114 neonatal units receiving a request for surveys, 104 units (91.2%) from 55 provinces participated. Neonatal units were categorized as level I (2/104, 1.9%), II (39/104, 37.5%), III (56/104, 53.8%), and IV (7/104, 6.8%). We found that the initiations of PN within the first hour and the first two hours of life occurred in 80.8% (84/104) and 95.2% (99/104) of the units, respectively. The early provision of amino acids, or AA (within the first day of life) and lipids (within two days of life) were documented by 85% (89/104) and 82% (84/104) of the respondents, respectively. The initial dose of AA ranged from 0.5 to 3 g/kg/day; the dose of AA less than 1 g/kg/day was reported by 7.7% (8/104) of the respondents; the maximum dose of AA ranged from 2 to over 4.5 g/kg/day, with 4 g/kg/day reported by 47.1% (49/104) of the respondents. The initial dose of lipids was between 0.5 and 2 g/kg/day, frequently 1 g/kg/day, reported by 51.9% (54/104) of the respondents; the target lipid dose ranged from 3 to 4 g/kg/day in 93.3% (97/104) respondents; the maximum target dose for lipid was 4 g/kg/day in 36.5% (38/104) of the respondents. The initial glucose dose was distributed as follows: 46.2% of respondents (48/104) administered 4 mg/kg/minute, 21.2% (22/104) used 5 mg/kg/minute, 28.8% (30/104) used 6 mg/kg/minute, and 3.8% (4/104) used 3 mg/kg/minute. Additionally, 48.1% of respondents (50/104) reported a maximum glucose infusion rate above 13 mg/kg/min and 19.2% (20/104) above 15 mg/kg/min. Nineteen percent (20/104) of the respondents reported a lack of micronutrients. Barriers to PN initiation included difficulty in establishing intravenous lines, the absence of standardized protocols, the lack of lipids and micronutrients, infections, and unavailable software supporting neonatologists in calculating nutrition paradigms.CONCLUSION: This study's findings highlight the highly variable PN practice across neonatal units in Vietnam. Deviations from current practical guidelines can be explained by various barriers, most of which are modifiable. A monitoring network for nutritional practice status and a database to track the nutritional outcomes of preterm infants in Vietnam are needed.

U2 - 10.7759/cureus.61187

DO - 10.7759/cureus.61187

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 38803401

VL - 16

SP - e61187

JO - Cureus

JF - Cureus

SN - 2168-8184

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 398545350