Randomized Clinical Trial of New Intravenous Lipid (SMOFlipid 20%) Versus Medium‐Chain Triglycerides/Long‐Chain Triglycerides in Adult Patients Undergoing Gastrointestinal Surgery

Ming‐Hsun Wu(National Taiwan University Hospital), Mingyang Wang(National Taiwan University Hospital), Chin-Yao Yang(National Taiwan University Hospital), Min‐Liang Kuo(National Taiwan University), Ming‐Tsan Lin(National Taiwan University Hospital)
Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition
November 27, 2013
Cited by 32

Abstract

BACKGROUND: SMOFlipid 20% is intravenous lipid emulsion (ILE) containing long-chain triglycerides (LCT), medium-chain triglycerides (MCT), olive oil, and fish oil as a mixed emulsion containing α-tocopherol. The aim was to assess the efficacy of this new ILE in gastrointestinal surgery compared with MCT/LCT. METHODS: In this prospective study, 40 patients were randomized to SMOFlipid 20% or MCT/LCT (Lipovenoes 20%) group. Clinical and biochemistry data were collected. Inflammatory markers (CRP, IL-6, IL-10, TNF-α, TGF-β1) and oxidative stress (ROS and superoxide) were measured. RESULTS: Thirty-five patients (17 males and 18 females) with a mean age of 57 years completed the study. The patients' demographic characteristics (age, gender, height, body weight, and BMI) were similar without significant differences between groups. The increment of triglyceride on day 6 from baseline was significantly lower in SMOFlipid group than in Lipovenoes MCT/LCT group. Inflammatory markers, as well as superoxide radical and total oxygen radical were not different between groups. CONCLUSIONS: Despite the comparable effect on inflammatory response, because of its well-balanced fatty acid pattern, relatively low n-6:n-3 ratio, and high vitamin E content, SMOFlipid had a better triglyceride-lowering effect as compared with MCT/LCT in adult patients undergoing gastrointestinal surgery.


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