Role of Intraoperative and Postoperative Blood Glucose Concentrations in Predicting Outcomes after Cardiac Surgery

Author:

Duncan Andra E.1,Abd-Elsayed Alaa2,Maheshwari Ankit3,Xu Meng4,Soltesz Edward5,Koch Colleen G.6

Affiliation:

1. Staff Anesthesiologist.

2. Resident, Department of Anesthesiology, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio.

3. Resident, Department of General Anesthesia.

4. Senior Biostatistician, Department of Quantitative Health Sciences.

5. Staff Surgeon, Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio.

6. Professor of Anesthesiology, Departments of Cardiothoracic Anesthesia and Outcomes Research.

Abstract

Background Severe hyperglycemia is associated with adverse outcomes after cardiac surgery. Whether intraoperative and postoperative glucose concentrations equally impact outcomes is unknown. The objective of this investigation was to compare the ability of perioperative glucose concentrations and glycemic variability to predict adverse outcomes. Risk associated with decreasing increments of glucose concentrations, hypoglycemia, and diabetic status was also examined. Methods This retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data included 4,302 patients who underwent cardiac surgery between October 3, 2005 and May 31, 2007 at the Cleveland Clinic. Time-weighted mean intraoperative (GlcOR) and postoperative (GlcICU) glucose concentrations were calculated. Patients were categorized as follows: Glc more than 200, 171-200, 141-170, and less than or equal to 140 mg/dl. Coefficient of variation was used to calculate glycemic variability. Logistic regression model with backward selection assessed the relationship between glucose concentrations, variability, and adverse outcomes while adjusting for potential confounders. Another model assessed the predictability of GlcOR and GlcICU on adverse outcomes. Results Both GlcOR and GlcICU predicted risk for mortality and morbidity. Increased postoperative glycemic variability was associated with increased risk for adverse outcomes. Severe hyperglycemia (GlcOR and GlcICU > 200 mg/dl) was associated with worse outcomes; however, decreasing increments of GlcOR did not consistently reduce risk. GlcOR less than or equal to 140 mg/dl was not associated with improved outcomes compared with severe hyperglycemia, despite infrequent hypoglycemia. Diabetic status did not influence the effects of hyperglycemia. Conclusion Perioperative glucose concentrations and glycemic variability are important in predicting outcomes after cardiac surgery. Incremental decreases of intraoperative glucose concentrations did not consistently reduce risk. Despite rare hypoglycemia, intraoperative glucose concentrations closest to normoglycemia were associated with worse outcomes.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference49 articles.

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