Preoperative Insulin Intensification to Improve Day of Surgery Blood Glucose Control.

Mehraneh Khalighi, Nancy M Yazici, Paul B Cornia
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Abstract

Background: Guidelines offer varying recommendations for preoperative long-acting basal insulin dosing, despite mounting evidence of the advantages of maintaining perioperative glucose levels between 80 and 180 mg/dL.

Observations: We iteratively adjusted health care practitioner (HCP) instructions to intensify insulin dosing on the evening before surgery for 195 consecutive patients with diabetes mellitus treated with long-acting basal insulin with an evening dosage. Baseline data was collected in phase 1. In phase 2, the preoperative insulin dose on the evening before surgery was increased for patients with hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) > 8%; in phase 3, it was increased for patients with HbA1c ≤ 8% while sustaining the phase 2 change. Increased preoperative insulin doses did not change the rates of day of surgery (DOS) hyperglycemia or hypoglycemia. Overall, HCP adherence to the modified protocols was high (89%). A decline in HCP adherence after phase 2 protocol change was associated with a transient increase in DOS hyperglycemia. Patient adherence to preoperative medication instructions was high (86%) and was not affected by protocol changes.

Conclusions: Preoperative insulin intensification the evening before surgery did not change rates of DOS hyperglycemia or hypoglycemia. HCP adherence decreased transiently, which briefly increased DOS hyperglycemia rates in some patients. Perioperative hyperglycemia, defined as blood glucose levels ≥ 180 mg/dL in the immediate pre- and postoperative period, is associated with increased postoperative morbidity, including infections, preoperative interventions, and in-hospital mortality.1-3 Despite being identified as a barrier to optimal perioperative glycemic control, limited evidence is available on patient or health care practitioner (HCP) adherence to preoperative insulin protocols.4-6.

术前胰岛素强化改善手术当日血糖控制。
背景:尽管越来越多的证据表明将围手术期血糖水平维持在80 - 180mg /dL之间是有利的,但指南对术前长效基础胰岛素剂量提供了不同的建议。观察:我们对195例连续接受晚间长效基础胰岛素治疗的糖尿病患者,反复调整保健医生(HCP)的指导,在手术前晚上加强胰岛素剂量。在第一阶段收集基线数据。在第二阶段,对于糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c) > 8%的患者,术前晚上胰岛素剂量增加;在3期试验中,HbA1c≤8%的患者在维持2期变化的同时,其剂量增加。术前胰岛素剂量的增加并没有改变手术当日高血糖或低血糖的发生率。总体而言,HCP对修改方案的依从性很高(89%)。2期方案改变后HCP依从性的下降与DOS高血糖的短暂增加有关。患者对术前用药指导的依从性很高(86%),并且不受方案变更的影响。结论:术前晚胰岛素强化对DOS高血糖和低血糖发生率无明显影响。HCP依从性短暂下降,这在一些患者中短暂增加了DOS高血糖率。围手术期高血糖,定义为术前和术后血糖水平≥180 mg/dL,与术后发病率增加相关,包括感染、术前干预和住院死亡率。1-3尽管被认为是最佳围手术期血糖控制的障碍,但关于患者或保健医生(HCP)是否遵守术前胰岛素治疗方案的证据有限。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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