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The Journal of Health, Population and Nutrition
icddr,b
ISSN: 1606-0997 EISSN: 2072-1315
Vol. 25, Num. 3, 2007, pp. 278-284
Untitled Document

Journal of Health, Population and Nutrition, Vol. 25, No. 3, September, 2007, pp.278-284

Does an L-glutamine-containing, Glucose-free, Oral Rehydration Solution Reduce Stool Output and Time to Rehydrate in Children with Acute Diarrhoea? A Double-blind Randomized Clinical Trial

Claudia Gutiérrez1, Sofía Villa2, Felipe R. Mota1, Juan J. Calva3

1Teaching Department and Nephrology Department, Hospital Infantil de México Federico Gómez, Secretaría de Salud, Mexico City, Mexico, 2Coordinación de Investigación Epidemiológica y Servicios de Salud, Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social, Mexico City, and 3Clinical Epidemiology Unit, Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Médicas y Nutrición Salvador Zubirán, Secretaría de Salud, Mexico City  

Correspondence and reprint requests should be addressed to: Dr. Juan José Calva Clinical Epidemiology Unit Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Médicas y Nutrición Salvador Zubirán Calle Vasco de Quiroga 15, Tlalpan 14000 Mexico City, Mexico Email: jcalva@quetzal.innsz.mx Fax: (+52) (55) 55-73-62-13

Code Number: hn07037

ABSTRACT  

This study assessed whether an oral rehydration solution (ORS) in which glucose is replaced by L-glutamine (L-glutamine ORS) is more effective than the standard glucose-based rehydration solution recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO-ORS) in reducing the stool volume and time to rehydrate in acute diarrhoea. In a double-blind, randomized controlled trial in a Mexican hospital, 147 dehydrated children, aged 1-60 month(s), were assigned either to the WHO-ORS (74 children), or to the L-glutamine ORS (73 children) and followed until successful rehydration. There were no significant differences between the groups in stool output during the first four hours, time to successful rehydration, volume of ORS required for rehydration, urinary output, and vomiting. This was independent of rotavirus-associated infection. An L-glutamine-containing glucose-free ORS seems not to offer greater clinical benefit than the standard WHO-ORS in mildly-to-moderately-de­hydrated children with acute non-cholera diarrhoea.  

Key words: Child; Clinical trials; Dehydration; Diarrhoea; Double-blind method; Glucose; Glutamine; Oral rehydration solutions; Oral rehydration therapy; Randomized controlled trials; Rehydra­tion; Rotavirus; Mexico

Introduction

During the last three decades, the distribution and promotion of oral rehydration solutions (ORS) have helped save millions of lives and have been a model as a cost-effective public-health interven­tion, yet the standard glucose-based solution re-commended by the World Health Organization (WHO-ORS) does not significantly reduce the gross stool volume nor the duration of the diarrhoeal episode. Thus, there has been a great interest in de­veloping alternative efficacious ORS capable of re­ducing stool output and duration of illness, which could enhance their acceptance by users (1).  

The amino acid L-glutamine is a theoretically-use­ful component in ORS because of its ability to act as a co-transport substrate with sodium, which leads to an increased absorption of NaCl, and its widely-known property as a fuel source for rapid turnover cells, including intestinal epithelial cells, lymphocytes, fibroblasts, and reticulocytes (2). Findings of animal and human studies have demon-strated that glutamine supplementation can ameliorate the intestinal damage and improve the gastrointestinal function and gut and systemic im­mune function (3). In a perfused rat ileum model exposed to cholera toxin, a dramatic reduction of toxin-induced water and sodium secretion, when a glutamine-based solution is used, has been demonstrated (3). This evidence suggests that a glutamine-based ORS might be the ideal solution to facilitate absorption of sodium and water and to improve healing from an enteric infection.  

In two clinical trials among children with non-cholera diarrhoea, no advantage of the glutamine-based ORS, compared to the WHO-ORS, was found (1,4); however, the former solution contained both glucose and glutamine, and its osmolarity was 380 mOsm/L (vs 311 mOsm/L in the WHO-ORS), which may explain the observed lack of benefit from the glutamine-ORS. Glutamine is an effective co-trans­porter of sodium in diarrhoea but its superiority to glucose in terms of limiting stool volume has not been proved in these studies, probably due to the high osmolarity of the experimental solutions.  

Because there is no published study testing the efficacy of an ORS in which glucose is replaced by L-glutamine, we were interested in testing whether this solution, with a relatively low os­molarity, could be a more effective ORS by re­ducing the faecal volume in children with acute diarrhoea. The main objective of this study was to assess if an L-glutamine-containing, glucose-free ORS, could reduce the stool output and the rehy­dration time in mildly-to-moderately dehydrated children with acute diarrhoea compared to the standard glucose-based formulation recommend­ed by the WHO.

Materials and Methods

Study design  

This is a double-blind, randomized controlled clini­cal trial. Eligible children were randomly allocated to either of the two study arms: the L-glutamine-based solution or the glucose-based solution (WHO-ORS).  

Eligibility criteria  

We included children aged 1-60 month(s) who had diarrhoea (defined as the passage of three or more loose or watery stools in the 24-hour period prior to enrollment) for not more than five days, with dehydration (with at least two of the diagnostic signs given by the WHO guidelines) and seen at the Oral Rehydration Service of the Hospital Infantil de México Federico Gómez during 1 September 2002–1 December 2003. Eligible children were screened at the hospital by a paediatrician and included in the study if the responsible caregiver signed a writ­ten informed consent to participate. A child was ex­cluded if he or she had severe dehydration and/or hypovolemic shock, altered consciousness, dysen­tery, severe malnutrition (5), or high stool output (defined as ≥10 mL/kg/hour). Children were elimi­nated from the study when the caregiver asked for voluntary drop-out, or when the child had incom­plete laboratory results.  

Baseline assessment  

A thorough clinical history, which included data on family history, duration of diarrhoea, flu­ids ingested prior to admission of patient, num­ber of stools and vomits in the previous 24 hours, presence of fever (≥38.0 °C), and body-weight and height. On admission, all children were weighed using a scale with 50-g sensitivity (Tanita model 1580, Tokyo, Japan). A faecal sample was obtained for identification of rotavirus, Vibrio chole-rae, and other common enteropathogens, such as Shigella spp., Salmonella spp., and Campylobacter jejuni, and to determine faecal-specific gravity. A blood sample was obtained to measure urea, creatinine, glucose, sodium, potassium, and osmo­lality. A urine sample was obtained to measure sodium, potassium, osmolality, and specific gravity.  

Interventions  

Both WHO-ORS and L-glutamine ORS were packed in identical bags, and their administration started on the day of enrollment. The WHO-ORS contained sodium chloride−3.5 g/L, dihydrated trisodic ci­trate−2.9 g/L, potassium chloride−1.5 g/L, and an­hydride glucose−20.0 g/L and had a total osmolari­ty of 311 mOsm/L. The L-glutamine-based solution contained sodium chloride−3.5 g/L, dihydrated tri­sodic citrate−2.9 g/L, potassium chloride−1.5 g/L, and L-glutamine−20.0 g/L and had a total osmolar­ity of 284 mOsm/L. Both the solutions were iden­tical in appearance and taste and were identified with a secret code (double-blinding). Additionally, both the solutions were assigned a unique serial number. The randomization list that linked serial numbers with the ORS group identity was kept at the Hospital’s Pharmacy until the end of enroll­ment and follow-up. The study staff was blinded to the ORS assigned, while the child remained in the study. The assigned solution was given to the mother with instructions for administration to her child, along with standard messages on appropri­ate feeding (6-8) according to the recommenda­tions of WHO. Both the study groups received the oral solution at an initial amount of 100 mL/kg for four hours; this was given by the patient’s mother in fractionated doses every 30 minutes using cup and spoon. If vomiting occurred in excess of once per hour, oral administration was withheld for 20 minutes; if there was no abdominal complication that contraindicated oral intake, the ORS was re-introduced and increased at a dose of 0.5 mL per kg/weight every five minutes. If the child did not vomit for 10 minutes, intake was progressively increased until reaching the initial dose. If the child continued vomiting, the patient underwent rehydration using a nasogastric tube at an amount of 25-30 mL per kg of weight per hour. If vomits persisted, despite the use of the nasogastric tube, the child was rehydrated by the intravenous (IV) route.  

Follow-up and outcome measurements  

All patients were clinically evaluated every hour, and data were registered. Faeces, vomits, and urine were collected in plastic bags or graduated recipi­ents and their volume quantified every hour. The main outcome measure was the time to achieve a successful rehydration, i.e. the span between the start of oral rehydration therapy (ORT) and the moment rehydration was achieved. Rehydra­tion was defined as when (a) the child presented none or only one of the signs of dehydration, (b) the stool output was less than 10 mL/weight kg/hour, (c) the urinary-specific gravity was less than 1,030, and (d) body-weight was stable dur­ing three consecutive hours. When this occurred, usualfeeding was re-introduced, and the care­giver was trained to continue treatment at home. Two definitions of failure to rehydrate were used. One was when the child presented a stool output of ≥10 mL/weight kg/hour during four consecu­tive hours without improvement of the signs of hydration status and the other, when dehy­dration signs worsened at any moment of treat­ment. When the former definiton occurred, a rice starch powder solution was started at a dose of 25 mL/weight kg/hour until reduction in stool output, if no worsening of dehydration, was observed. If after another four hours, the stool volume did not decrease with the rice starch solution or if dehydration signs worsened, the child was rehydrated using the intravenous route. Osmotic diarrhoea was defined as when the faeces osmolality (Na faecal + K faecal × 2) was ≥100.  

Ethics  

The trial received ethical clearance from the Ethics and Investigation Committee of the Hospital In­fantil de México Federico Gómez in Mexico City. Implementation of all aspects of the project was in agreement with the International Ethical Guide­lines for Research Involving Subjects, as stated in the latest version of the Helsinki Declaration. Informed and written consent was obtained from parents at the beginning of the study.  

Statistics  

Statistical analyses were undertaken using the SPSS (version 10.0) statistical data management program package. All analyses were conducted on an inten­tion-to-treat basis. The Mann-Whitney U test was used for determining the differences between me­dians, chi-squaretest for the comparison of propor­tions, and the Spearman’s correlation coefficient (Rs) in the assessment of the association between two dimensional scale values. The odds ratio (OR) and its 95% confidence interval (CI) were calculated in 2 by 2 contingency tables. The time-dependent cumulative probability of achieving a rehydration status was calculated using the Kaplan Meier analy­sis and the comparison between curves, according to the type of ORS, was made with the Log rank test. The proportional hazard ratio (HR) and its 95% CI of the time to a successful rehydration with the L-glutamine ORS, with the WHO-ORS as the refer­ence, were estimated with a Cox regression model. A minimum sample size of 124 patients was calcu­lated as required to have a power of 80% to detect as a statistically significant (two-tailed p value at 5%) difference between groups, in the stool output, of at least 30% (9). Considering the possibility of up to a 20% drop-out rate, 74 children were enrolled to be assigned to each of the two arms of the trial.

Results

In total, 148 dehydrated children with diarrhoea were enrolled into the study. Seventy-four were randomly allocated to receive the WHO-ORS and 73 the L-glutamine solution. Parents of one child in the L-glutamine ORS group decided to volun­tarily drop-out from the study. Baseline charac­teristics at study entry were comparable between both the groups, including rotavirus and bacte­rial identification in faeces (p>0.05) (Table 1).

All children were successfully rehydrated with ORS and discharged alive from the Hospital. The cumu­lative probability of being rehydrated at 4, 6, and 10 hours in the WHO-ORS group was 26%, 64%, and 93% respectively, and in the L-glutamine-ORS group, these frequencies were 34%, 67%, and 97% respectively (Log-rank test, p=0.69). Only one pa­tient from each group required 12 hours or more to be rehydrated. In the time to rehydrate analy­sis, the hazard ratio of the effect of the glutamine-based ORS, with the WHO-ORS as the reference, was calculated to be 1.06 (95% CI 0.76-1.46).  

Six children (8%) in the WHO-ORS group and four children (5%) in the L-glutamine-ORS group showed failure to the original ORS, and this was changed to a rice-powder ORS (OR=0.66; 95% CI 0.15-2.79; p=0.53; with the WHO-ORS as the refer­ence group). One patient (1.3%) in the WHO-ORS group, failed treatment due to persistent vomit­ing, was rehydrated with the WHO-ORS through nasogastric tube and subsequently returned to the oral route.

The median time and volume of ORS required to correct dehydration and the stool, urine, and vomit output during the rehydration period were similar between both the groups (Table 2).  

The median stool output (in mL/kg of body-weight) during the first, second, third, and fourth hour since the start of ORS was 9.75, 8.45, 10.85, and 10.65 respectively in the WHO-ORS group and 11.90, 13.70, 10.70, and 10.00 respectively in the L-glutamine ORS group. The differences between both the groups were not statistically significant. Another analysis stratifying children with and without rotavirus-associated infection showed that both the ORS treatment groups had similar volumes of stool output during these same time periods within each stratum (data not shown).  

The subgroup analysis taking only children with rotavirus-associated infection (62 children) showed that the cumulative probability of being rehy­drated at four, six, and eight hours in the WHO-ORS group (35 children) was 23%, 69%, and 89% respectively, and in the L-glutamine-ORS group (27 children), these frequencies were 41%, 67%, and 100 % respectively (Log-rank test, p=0.22). The HR of the effect of the glutamine-based ORS, with the WHO-ORS as the reference, was cal­culated to be 1.31 (95% CI 0.78-2.19). In addition, children with no rotavirus-associated infection (85 children), the cumulative probability of being rehydrated at 4, 6, and 8 hours, in the WHO-ORS group (39 children) was 28%, 59%, and 92% re­spectively, and in the L-glutamine-ORS group (46 children), these frequencies were 30%, 67%, and 80% respectively (Log-rank test, p=0.86). The HR of the effect of the glutamine-based ORS, with the WHO-ORS as the reference, was calculated to be 0.97 (95% CI 0.63-1.49).

No association between the volume of ingested ORS and the stool output was found in any of the two treatment groups (Rs=0.30 in the WHO-ORS group and Rs=0.53 in the L-glutamine solution group; p=0.20). The median levels of serum sodium and glucose, at the end of rehydration period, showed not to be significantly different between the groups (p=0.84 and p=0.25). No children developed hypo- or hypernatraemia or hypo- or hyperglycaemia at the end of the study. The median of serum creati­nine, serum and urinary osmolality, and the pro­portion of patients with osmotic diarrhoea, at the end of the study, were not significantly different between both the groups (p=0.55, 0.53, 0.64, and 0.16 respectively).

Discussion

There are few clinical trials in the literature that tested L-glutamine-containing oral rehydration so­lutions. One trial was carried out in adults with cholera, and the other one in children with diar­rhoea due to diverse aetiologic agents. The former study tested a solution with 50 mmol/L of glucose and 50 mmol/L of L-glutamine, with an osmolar­ity of 300 mOsm/L, and showed a marked re­duction in the stool output and in the dura­tion of the diarrhoeal episode (1). In contrast, in the second study, the solution contained 90 mmol/L of L-glutamine and 90 mmol/L of glucose, with an osmolarity of 380 mOsm/L, and showed no clinical benefit in children rehydrated with the L-glutamine-added solution, probably due to the relatively high osmolarity of this ORS (4).  

Our study was designed to test the hypothesis that a water and electrolyte solution in which glucose, as co-transporter of these elements, is replaced by L-glutamine would lead to better clinical outcomes in the process of oral rehydration of children with acute non-cholera diarrhoea compared to the stan­dard WHO-recommended glucose-containing ORS. The rationale for this hypothesis is based on two theoretical advantages of the former solution; first, the evidence from experimental models showing that supplemental glutamine can ameliorate the intestinal damage, enhance the gastrointestinal function, and reduce enteropathogens’toxin-in­duced water and sodium secretion in the gut and second, that through the elimination of glucose in our experimental ORS, the osmolarity of the solution is decreased from 300 to 380 mOsm/L (in the L-glutamine plus glucose-ORS) or from 311 mOsm/L (in the glucose-containing WHO-ORS) to 284 mOsm/L (in the L-glutamine-containing, glucose-free, ORS). To our knowledge, there is no published study testing the clinical efficacy of an L-glutamine-containing, glucose-free, ORS.  

The results of our study showed a similar rate of successful rehydration, time to achieve it, and stool output during the first hours of rehydration ther­apy, among children receiving the experimental ORS compared to those under the standard WHO-ORS.  

There are several possible explanations for the lack of reduction of the stool volume and time to rehy­drate in our children treated with the L-glutamine ORS. First, this amino acid might have a lesser ef­fect on intestinal absorption of water and sodium in non-cholera diarrhoea compared to diarrhoea caused by V. cholerae, in which there is a relatively-larger secretion of sodium and chloride ions in­side the intestinal lumen (10). This latter situation would provide a larger amount of sodium that is co-transported with the L-glutamine with a conse­quent major reduction in the stool output. These phenomena may not occur in diarrhoea second­ary to other infectious agents, such as rotavirus and enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, as is the case with most of our study children.Second, it is widely known that rotavirus is the main cause of severe dehydrating diarrhoea, frequently associated with a high rate of stool output (11,12); thus, the inclusion of these patients in our study (42% of the total study sample) might have diluted a possible beneficial effect of the L-glutamine ORS in children with diarrhoea by other aetiologies. Yet, a stratified analysis of a subgroup of children with rotavirus-associated or rotavirus-free diar­rhoea showed no differential clinical effect for the L-glutamine ORS. Third, it might be that a high intake of ORS could lead to a larger faecal volume during the rehydration period, as suggested by others (13); however, in the analysis of our own data, such association was not found.  

Worth mentioning is that none of our patients developed hypoglycaemia (14), despite the fact that the experimental solution did not contain glucose. Ronan et al. reported transitory hyper-glycaemia associated with dehydration-generated stress in patients with acute diarrhoea (15). This may explain why in our children blood glucose remained within the normal range at the end of the rehydration period.  

In contrast to results of other similar studies, we included both male and female children to be able to generalize our results to the overall infant population. A potential problem with this strategy is the error in the measurement of the urine and stool volumes, as they can get mixed in female in­fants. However, a special care was taken in separat­ing and quantifying urine from stool outputs in our study. Moreover, we consider that the amount of urine in these infants could have been minimal due to the low rate of diuresis that dehydrated pa­tients present during the rehydration period.  

In the present research, we did not assess the total duration of diarrhoea and stool output after dis­charge from the hospital, as outcome measures, because it is very difficult to reach a control of all the determinants of these events, such as the child’s feeding and oral fluids administered at home. This methodological issue may limit the external validity of our results  

In conclusion, the glucose-free L-glutamine ORS seems not to offer an additional clinical bene-fit over the standard glucose-based WHO-ORS, among dehydrated children aged less than five years with non-cholera acute diarrhoea. This lack of an additional advantage is independent of ro­tavirus-associated infection. Because the cost of L-glutamine-based ORS is relatively high, its indi­cation would be limited to certain circumstanc­es, such as an alternative rehydration therapy in children in whom the glucose-based ORS is con­traindicated due to transitory carbohydrate intol­erance (16,17). Further studies are needed to test a possible clinical advantage of the L-glutamine ORS in enteric illness due to particular patho­gens-producing cholera-like enterotoxins.

Aknowledgements

The authors are grateful to Maricela Echeverría-Montalvo and nursery staff at the Hospital In­fantil de México Federico Gómez for technical assistance. The Hospital Infantil de México Fed­erico Gómez supplied the WHO-ORS—Vida Suero Oral—and the laboratory equipment. Pisa Labo­ratories, S.A. de C.V. supplied the L-glutamine ORS, and CONACYT (Mexican National Council for Science and Technology) gave financial sup­port.

References

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© 2007 ICDDR,B: Centre for Health and Population Research


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