#NASPGHAN19 Intestinal Failure Session Part 2

Our Spooky Pumpkin

Here are some notes and a few slides from NASPGHAN’s plenary session.  There could be errors of transcription in my notes.

Benjamin Gold, NASPGHAN president and part of our GI group, GI Care For Kids, welcomed everyone to the meeting.

Link to NASPGHAN_Annual_Meeting_Program 2019

Beth Carter  Trophic Growth Factors: A Practical View

Key Points:

  • GLP-2 has been approved as agent for intestinal failure for children (May 2019)
  • Studies thus far have shown good safety but concerns remain (?increased risk of polyposis, increased growth of neoplasm) and as such increased surveillance needed for patients receiving GLP-2
  • Cost in adults ~$295,000 per year
  • Most patients need to continue GLP-2 to maintain effect

Arthur Kasti  Abstract 218  Microbial Metabolites as Markers of Intestinal Dysbiosis in Pediatric Short Bowel Syndrome

This was a terrific presentation. Key points:

  • Microbiome in SBS patients is less diverse
  • Current diagnosis of bacterial overgrowth is difficult and definitive diagnosis is often impractical
  • Several metabolites may be helpful in diagnosis of bacterial overgrowth

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Nutrition Week (Day 4) Trophic Hormone for Pediatric Short Bowel Syndrome

A recent study (BA Carter et al. J Pediatr 2017; 181: 102-11) provides some preliminary data on the use of glucagon-like peptide-2 (GLP-2) (Teduglutide) for pediatric short bowel syndrome (SBS).

This was a 12-week, open-label study in patients aged 1-17 years with intestinal failure (IF) associated with SBS. Prior to the study, patients had shown little to minimal advance in enteral nutrition for at least 3 months. Three doses of GLP-2 (0.0125 mg/kg/d, 0.025 mg/kg/day, and 0.05 mg/kg/day).

Key findings:

  • All treated patients (37) experienced mild or moderate adverse effects, including vomiting, pyrexia, catheter-related complications, and upper respiratory tract infections. No serious adverse events were identified. In the 5 patients who received standard care, adverse effects were recorded as well, including upper respiratory tract infections in 2 (40%) which was similar to the other groups.
  • By week 12, parenteral nutrition (PN) volume and calories were reduced in the higher dosed groups.  In the 0.025 mg/kg/day group, PN volume dropped by 41% and calories by 45%.  In the 0.05 mg/kg/day group, PN volume dropped by 25% and calories by 52%. Virtually no change in these parameters occurred in the lowest dose (0.0125 mg/kg/day) with no change in volume and 6% drop in calories.
  • Enteral feeding volume occurred in all groups: 22%, 32%, and 40% in the groups and was directly related to the GLP-2 dosing.
  • Citrulline levels (a biomarker of enteral autonomy) were monitored “but the results were clouded by wide variability of baseline values.”  In adult studies, citrulline levels increased significantly.

My take: This open-label study has many limitations; further studies are planned (ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02682381). Nevertheless, this study indicates that GLP-2 holds promise as a therapy for SBS/IF.

Another slide in a recent lecture on PNALD (slide derived from Conrad Cole lecture in Octobler 2015 -available at Pediatric Nutritionist Blog, slide 49):

screenshot-109

Related blog posts:

Four advances for intestinal failure

Several advances in the management of intestinal failure have the potential to improve the outlook for our intestinal failure (IF) (aka Short Bowel Syndrome) patients (JPEN 2012; 36: 36S-42S).

Although IF patients already have improving survival with rates of 80-95% over followup ranging from 1-5 years, many still do not survive, primarily due to bacterial infections or chronic liver disease.  Ongoing research has made some promising steps in the management of these pediatric patients.  This article focuses on four of these steps.

1. Citrulline monitoring

  • Major source of citrulline is enterocyte production.  Citrulline is an amino acid not encoded in human genetic code; it is present in some proteins as a product of posttranslational modification.
  • Watermelon is one of few dietary sources.
  • Useful biomarker for bowel length/absorption –independent of inflammatory markers
  • Levels >15-20 μmol/L indicate good likelihood of achieving enteral autonomy
  • Levels <12μmol/L indicate a very low likelihood of achieving enteral autonomy

2. Teduglutide therapy

  • Analog of glucagon-like peptide 2 (GLP-2) but harder to degrade (longer half-life)
  • Preliminary studies in adults indicate improvement in absorption and villous histology after subcutaneous administration for three weeks.  Improvements reverse when drug is discontinued.
  • Since GLP-2 is produced by colon & increased in IF (if colon present), unclear whether exogenous administration will be as beneficial in patients with residual colon

3. Lipid minimization &/or fish oil lipids

  • Cholestasis increases in patients receiving more than 1 g/kg/day of intralipids (soy based).
  • Fish oil (Omegaven) has shown benefit in lowering cholestasis in numerous case reports.  This may be due the high content of anti-inflammatory ω-3 fatty acids.
  • Another preparation SMOFLipid is a mixed formulation and may be safer than pure fish oil; randomized controlled studies of both of these lipid formulations are underway.
  • Fish oil has not been shown to improve histology
  • Parenteral nutrition associated liver disease (PNALD) may improve with lowering lipids & may not need omegaven

4. Ethanol locks

  • May be beneficial in treating and preventing central line infections.  In both situations, in small studies, ethanol locks lowered incidence of recurrent infections.
  • Six studies involving 75 patients (66 pediatric patients) lowered infection rates from approximately 10 per 1000 catheter days to 2 per 1000 catheter days.
  • Ethanol concentrations were mostly 70% in these studies, though 25% has been used.
  • Dwell times ranged from 2-14 hours.
  • Randomized studies are in progress.
  • Fewer infections should reduce the likelihood of death from sepsis and death due to loss of venous access.

Additional references:

  • -NEJM 2010; 362: 181.  Letter to editor describes use of fish oil in (n=125) Boston pediatric patients.
  • -JPGN 2009; 48: 209. n=12. SBS.9/12 improved with omegaven. 3 had transplant (L-ITx). No controls.
  • -NEJM 2009; 361: 998. Intestinal Rx.  Review claims ~90% 1yr survival. 47% 5yr, 61% 3yr (expecting to go higher)
  • -JPGN 2009; 48: 334. Isolated liver w SBS feasible IF 50cm small bowel remaining or 30cm w ICV, 50% enteral nutrition >4 weeks with good growth, no dysmotility.
  • -Pediatrics 2008; 121: e678. n=18. use of fish oil improved cholestasis compared to historical controls.
  • -Gastroenterology 2008; 135: 61, 303. Survival of ITx (vs. HAL).  In many conditions, better off from survival standpoint without Tx. Tx if failure of TPN (severe liver dz/thrombosis of >/= 2 central veins, multiple bouts of sepsis/frequent dehydration), high risk of death, severe short bowel (<10cm in infants and <20cm in adults), pseudoobstruction, unwillingness to accept long-term tpn. 93% of TPN patients who did not have TPN-complications had 93% survival rate.  Thus, TPN is first line Rx as survival and quality of life often better.
  • -Pediatrics 2006; 118: e197-e201.  Reversal of TPN-AC c IV omega-3 fatty acids (fish oil-derived) instead of intralipids
  • -Liver Transplantation 2006; 12: 1062, 1040. Liver transplant alone reasonable to consider in some SBS patients who tolerate >50% enteral therapy and are less than 2 years old.
  • -Gastroenterology 2006; 130. Supp 1. Summary of NIH workshop on intestinal failure. TX Indications: Liver disease, thrombosis of major veins, recurrent catheter-related sepsis, frequent severe dehydration/electrolyte imbalance.
  • -JPGN 2005; 41: 47A (pg507). Poor prognosis: <40cm, needing >40kcal/kg PN, increased bili (>150 μmol/L)
  • -J Pediatr 2005; 146: 542. Serum citrulline > 19 μ/L associated with bowel adaptation/weaning off HAL.
  • -J Pediatr 2004; 145: 157-163. Survival of SBS with as little as 15
  • -Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2006; 160: 104953.  Use of ethanol lock (70%, 08-1.4mL for 12-24hrs, then withdraw). n=51.  High success rate in salvaging line
  • -J Pediatr 2001; 139: 27-33. Review of 30 pts. 3 of 30 pts with bowel length 40cm or less able to wean PN.
  • -Gastroenterology 2001; 120: 806-815. Glucagon-like peptide 2 improves nutrient absorption marginally.