International consensus guidelines for nutrition therapy in pancreatitis

JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr. 2012 May;36(3):284-91. doi: 10.1177/0148607112440823. Epub 2012 Mar 28.

Abstract

Guidelines for nutrition support in pancreatitis have been inconsistently adapted to clinical practice. The International Consensus Guideline Committee (ICGC) established a pancreatitis task force to review published guidelines for pancreatitis in nutrition support. A PubMed search using the terms pancreatitis, acute pancreatitis, chronic pancreatitis, nutrition support, parenteral nutrition, enteral nutrition, and guidelines was conducted for the period from January 1999 to May 2011. Eleven guidelines were identified for review. The ICGC used the following process to develop unified guideline statements: summarize the strength of evidence (grading) of the guidelines; establish level of evidence for ICGC statements as high, intermediate, and low; assign published guideline levels of evidence; and define an ICGC grading system. International Pancreatitis Guideline Grades were established as follows: platinum-high level of evidence and consistent agreement among the guidelines; gold-acceptable level of evidence and no conflicting statements in guidelines; and silver-single existing guideline statement with no conflict in other guidelines. Eighteen ICGC statements were derived from the 11 published pancreatitis guidelines. Uniform agreement from widely disparate groups (United States, Europe, Japan, and China) resulted in 4 platinum-level guideline statements for nutrition in pancreatitis: nutrition support therapy (NST) is generally not needed for mild to moderate disease, NST is needed for severe disease, enteral nutrition (EN) is preferred over parenteral nutrition (PN), and use PN when EN is contraindicated or not feasible. This methodology provides a template for future ICGC nutrition guideline development.

Publication types

  • Practice Guideline

MeSH terms

  • Acute Disease
  • Enteral Nutrition
  • Evidence-Based Medicine
  • Humans
  • International Cooperation
  • Nutritional Support / methods*
  • Pancreatitis / therapy*
  • Pancreatitis, Chronic / therapy
  • Parenteral Nutrition
  • Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
  • Societies, Medical
  • Treatment Outcome