deltatrials
Active Not Recruiting INTERVENTIONAL NCT05127109

The PASTDUe Nutrition Ecosystem Project (PASTDUe) (PASTDUe)

The PASTDUe Nutrition EcoSystem Pathway In Acute Care Abdominal Surgery and Trauma to Decrease Underfeeding and Complications

Sponsor: Duke University

Updated 10 times since 2021 Last updated: Apr 22, 2026 Started: Apr 25, 2022 Primary completion: Feb 20, 2026 Completion: Feb 20, 2027
This information is for research purposes only and is not medical advice. Consult a healthcare provider before making any medical decision.

A observational or N/A phase clinical study on Abdominal Trauma and Diet, Healthy, this trial is ongoing. The trial is conducted by Duke University and has accumulated 10 data snapshots since 2022. Infectious disease trials contribute critical data for public health response and treatment development.

Study Description(click to expand)

The purpose of this prospective trial is to study the impact of the utilization of structured nutrition delivery pathway on 300 adult abdominal trauma and surgery patients admitted to a Duke University Medical Center (DUMC) intensive care unit (ICU) through a structured nutrition delivery pathway from surgical intervention to hospital discharge. Objectives include evaluating the impact of a structured nutrition delivery pathway on 1) nosocomial infectious complications as defined by CDC guidelines after 7 days of ICU admission and 2) protein-calorie malnutrition, ventilator use, hospital disposition, hospital and ICU length of stay, ED/hospital utilization, total parenteral nutrition (TPN)-related complications, 1-year mortality, and hospital charges. Patient outcomes will be compared to a retrospective cohort of 300 historical matched control subjects. The study intervention, a structured nutrition delivery pathway called the Nutrition Ecosystem pathway consists of the following collaborative parts to optimize nutrition intake and delivery within this patient population: 1) parenteral nutrition initiated within 72 hours of operative intervention 2) metabolic cart assessments to determine resting energy expenditure (REE) and guide registered dietitians (RDs) 3) expedited delivery of oral nutrition supplements and 4) a team-based approach on proper documentation of nutrition delivery and intake. The population group will consist of 300...

The purpose of this prospective trial is to study the impact of the utilization of structured nutrition delivery pathway on 300 adult abdominal trauma and surgery patients admitted to a Duke University Medical Center (DUMC) intensive care unit (ICU) through a structured nutrition delivery pathway from surgical intervention to hospital discharge. Objectives include evaluating the impact of a structured nutrition delivery pathway on 1) nosocomial infectious complications as defined by CDC guidelines after 7 days of ICU admission and 2) protein-calorie malnutrition, ventilator use, hospital disposition, hospital and ICU length of stay, ED/hospital utilization, total parenteral nutrition (TPN)-related complications, 1-year mortality, and hospital charges. Patient outcomes will be compared to a retrospective cohort of 300 historical matched control subjects.

The study intervention, a structured nutrition delivery pathway called the Nutrition Ecosystem pathway consists of the following collaborative parts to optimize nutrition intake and delivery within this patient population: 1) parenteral nutrition initiated within 72 hours of operative intervention 2) metabolic cart assessments to determine resting energy expenditure (REE) and guide registered dietitians (RDs) 3) expedited delivery of oral nutrition supplements and 4) a team-based approach on proper documentation of nutrition delivery and intake. The population group will consist of 300 surgical patients admitted to a DUMC ICU following emergent/urgent major abdominal surgery secondary to abdominal trauma, intra-abdominal sepsis, ischemic bowel/vascular emergencies, or penetrating trauma and are not expected to receive enteral or oral nutrition for at least 72 hours. 300 historical matched control subjects not having received TPN in the first 7 hospital days will be enrolled from Duke Electronic Health Record between January 2018 and June 2020.

This study poses minimal risks to patients as the study activities match the current standard of care medical treatment such as nutrition delivery via TPN. Patients will benefit from metabolic and physiologic assessments, closer monitoring, and interdisciplinary support for nutrition optimization from nurses, dietitians, and providers throughout their hospitalization. Given patients' energy expenditure will be routinely measured by indirect calorimetry via a metabolic cart, a greater accuracy in caloric requirements will help achieve precision and goal nutrition for all participants.

Status Flow

~Dec 2021 – ~Feb 2022 · 2 months · monthly snapshot~Feb 2022 – ~Jun 2022 · 4 months · monthly snapshot~Jun 2022 – ~May 2023 · 11 months · monthly snapshotRecruiting~May 2023 – ~May 2024 · 12 months · monthly snapshotRecruiting~May 2024 – ~Jul 2024 · 2 months · monthly snapshot~Jul 2024 – ~Sep 2024 · 2 months · monthly snapshot~Sep 2024 – ~Mar 2025 · 6 months · monthly snapshotRecruiting~Mar 2025 – ~Feb 2026 · 11 months · monthly snapshotRecruiting~Feb 2026 – ~Apr 2026 · 3 months · monthly snapshotApr 28, 2026 – present · 2 months · daily API

Change History

10 versions recorded
  1. Apr 28, 2026 — Present [daily]

    Active Not Recruiting

    Phase: PHASE4None

  2. Feb 2026 — Apr 2026 [monthly]

    Active Not Recruiting PHASE4

    Status: RecruitingActive Not Recruiting

  3. Mar 2025 — Feb 2026 [monthly]

    Recruiting PHASE4

  4. Sep 2024 — Mar 2025 [monthly]

    Recruiting PHASE4

  5. Jul 2024 — Sep 2024 [monthly]

    Recruiting PHASE4

Show 5 earlier versions
  1. May 2024 — Jul 2024 [monthly]

    Recruiting PHASE4

  2. May 2023 — May 2024 [monthly]

    Recruiting PHASE4

  3. Jun 2022 — May 2023 [monthly]

    Recruiting PHASE4

    Status: Not Yet RecruitingRecruiting

  4. Feb 2022 — Jun 2022 [monthly]

    Not Yet Recruiting PHASE4

  5. Dec 2021 — Feb 2022 [monthly]

    Not Yet Recruiting PHASE4

    First recorded

Eligibility Summary

This is a research study to determine if a particular method of providing nutrition improves the clinical outcomes of patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) who have undergone abdominal surgery and would require nutrition delivered via the bloodstream (called total parenteral nutrition or TPN). The nutrition method we are testing is a structured nutrition delivery plan that involves tube feeding, oral nutrition supplements, and the use of a device (called an indirect calorimeter or IC) to measure calorie needs. This study will also use two devices to measure fat and muscle mass to examine changes during hospitalization. Subjects will be followed throughout hospitalization where nutrition status and fat and muscle mass will be closely monitored. Study activities will begin within 72 hours of a patient's abdominal surgery. TPN (total parenteral nutrition, a method of feeding that bypasses the usual process of eating and digestion) will be started, a non-invasive method of assessing calorie needs (indirect calorimetry (IC)) will be started, a urine sample will be collected to help assist in protein needs, and fat/muscle mass will be measured using bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA), and an ultrasound. This is a minimal risk study and all products/devices used are non-invasive and FDA-approved. Indirect calorimetry and urine sample collection will be conducted every 3 days during the stay in the Intensive Care Unit - ICU, then every 5 days until hospital discharge. BIA and muscle ultrasound will be conducted every 7 days during ICU stay, then every 14 days until hospital discharge.

Contact Information

Sponsor contact:
  • Duke University
Data source: ClinicalTrials.gov

For direct contact, visit the study record on ClinicalTrials.gov .

Study Locations