Nutrition Interventions in Pediatric Pancreatitis

ABSTRACT Objective: Despite the fact that pediatric pancreatitis is an uncommon disease, its prevalence has increased in recent years. Nevertheless, until 4 years ago, the lack of nutritional guidelines for pediatric pancreatitis was evident, with all recommendations being based on clinical practice...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of pediatric gastroenterology and nutrition 2019-07, Vol.69 (1), p.120-125
Hauptverfasser: Theodoridis, Xenophon, Grammatikopoulou, Maria G., Petalidou, Arianna, Stamouli, Eleni‐Maria, Fotiadou, Iliana, Gkiouras, Konstantinos, Bogdanos, Dimitrios P., Dardavessis, Theodore
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:ABSTRACT Objective: Despite the fact that pediatric pancreatitis is an uncommon disease, its prevalence has increased in recent years. Nevertheless, until 4 years ago, the lack of nutritional guidelines for pediatric pancreatitis was evident, with all recommendations being based on clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) for adults. The aim of the present study was to review and critically appraise guidelines for the medical nutrition therapy (MNT) of pediatric pancreatitis. Methods: A comprehensive search was performed in electronic databases (PubMed, Scopus, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence), the International Guidelines Network, BMJ best practice, and the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network to identify CPGs on the MNT of pediatric pancreatitis. The validated AGREE II tool was used for guidelines appraisal by a team of 3 independent multidisciplinary reviewers. Results: A total of 4 CPGs were retrieved with pediatric pancreatitis MNT information. Out of the 4 advising bodies in total, the joint society paper published by the ESPGHAN/NASPGHAN received the highest score in almost all domains, whereas the Belgian consensus obtained the lowest score in all domains but stakeholder involvement, and was not recommended by 2 out of 3 reviewers. Conclusions: Pediatric pancreatitis guidelines appear heterogenous in quality, rigour, and transparency. Our study points out existing gaps and biases in the CPGs, and delineates the need for improving the domains identified as being of low‐quality.
ISSN:0277-2116
1536-4801
DOI:10.1097/MPG.0000000000002364