Nutrients (Jan 2023)

Combining Phenylalanine and Leucine Levels Predicts 30-Day Mortality in Critically Ill Patients Better than Traditional Risk Factors with Multicenter Validation

  • Yi-Liang Tsou,
  • Chao-Hung Wang,
  • Wei-Siang Chen,
  • Huang-Ping Wu,
  • Min-Hui Liu,
  • Hsuan-Ching Lin,
  • Jung-Jung Chang,
  • Meng-Shu Tsai,
  • Tien-Yu Chen,
  • Cheng-I Cheng,
  • Jih-Kai Yeh,
  • I-Chang Hsieh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15030649
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 3
p. 649

Abstract

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In critically ill patients, risk scores are used; however, they do not provide information for nutritional intervention. This study combined the levels of phenylalanine and leucine amino acids (PLA) to improve 30-day mortality prediction in intensive care unit (ICU) patients and to see whether PLA could help interpret the nutritional phases of critical illness. We recruited 676 patients with APACHE II scores ≥ 15 or intubated due to respiratory failure in ICUs, including 537 and 139 patients in the initiation and validation (multicenter) cohorts, respectively. In the initiation cohort, phenylalanine ≥ 88.5 μM (indicating metabolic disturbance) and leucine p < 0.001). PLA scores were then classified into low, intermediate, high, and very-high risk categories with observed mortality rates of 9.0%, 23.8%, 45.6%, and 81.8%, respectively. These findings were validated in the multicenter cohort. PLA scores predicted 30-day mortality better than APACHE II and NUTRIC scores and provide a basis for future studies to determine whether PLA-guided nutritional intervention improves the outcomes of patients in ICUs.

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