Home enteral nutrition reduces complications, length of stay, and health care costs: results from a multicenter study

Am J Clin Nutr. 2014 Aug;100(2):609-15. doi: 10.3945/ajcn.113.082842. Epub 2014 Jun 25.

Abstract

Background: Home enteral nutrition (HEN) has always been recognized as a life-saving procedure, but with the ongoing economic crisis influencing health care, its cost-effectiveness has been questioned recently.

Objective: The unique reimbursement situation in Poland enabled the otherwise ethically unacceptable, hence unavailable, comparison of the period of no-feeding and long-term feeding and the subsequent analyses of the clinical value of the latter and its cost-effectiveness.

Design: The observational multicenter study in the group of 456 HEN patients [142 children: 55 girls and 87 boys, mean (±SD) age 8.7 ± 5.9 y; 314 adults: 151 women and 163 men, mean age 59.3 ± 19.8 y] was performed between January 2007 and July 2013. Two 12-mo periods were compared. During the first period, patients were tube fed a homemade diet and were not monitored; during the other period, patients received HEN. HEN included tube feeding and complex monitoring by a nutrition support team. The number of complications, hospital admissions, length of hospital stay, biochemical and anthropometric variables, and costs of hospitalization were compared.

Results: Implementation of HEN enabled weight gain and stabilized liver function in both age groups, but it hardly influenced the other tests. HEN implementation reduced the incidence of infectious complications (37.4% compared with 14.9%; P < 0.001, McNemar test), the number of hospital admissions [1.98 ± 2.42 (mean ± SD) before and 1.26 ± 2.18 after EN; P < 0.001, Wilcoxon's signed-rank test], and length of hospital stay (39.7 ± 71.9 compared with 11.9 ± 28.5 d; P < 0.001, Wilcoxon's signed-rank test). The mean annual costs ($) of hospitalization were reduced from 6500.20 ± 10,402.69 to 2072.58 ± 5497.00.

Conclusions: The study showed that HEN improves clinical outcomes and decreases health care costs. It was impossible, however, to determine precisely which factor mattered more: the artificial diet itself or the introduction of complex care.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02122120.

Publication types

  • Controlled Clinical Trial
  • Multicenter Study
  • Observational Study

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Aged
  • Child
  • Child, Preschool
  • Cost Savings*
  • Costs and Cost Analysis
  • Enteral Nutrition / adverse effects
  • Enteral Nutrition / economics*
  • Female
  • Food, Formulated* / adverse effects
  • Food, Formulated* / economics
  • Health Care Costs*
  • Home Care Services / economics*
  • House Calls / economics
  • Humans
  • Infection Control / economics*
  • Length of Stay
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Polen
  • Weight Gain

Associated data

  • ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT02122120