Effect of blood-sugar limitation on intensive care mortality: Intragroup evaluation

Author:

Nachtigall Irit1,Tafelski Sascha1,Tamarkin Andrey1,Rothbart Andreas1,Lange Martin1,Wegener Felix1,Balzer Felix1,Burgos Jack Poul Luengas1,Wernecke Klaus-Dieter2,Spies Claudia1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany

2. Institute of Medical Biometry, Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin and SOSTANA GmbH, Berlin, Germany

Abstract

Objective To evaluate the safety profile of blood sugar limits in intensive care unit (ICU) patients. Methods Adult patients with ICU stay >36 h, more than two blood sugar measurements and antibiotic therapy concordant with locally adapted guidelines were included. For analyses, one study cohort was defined in two ways: as a narrow group, euglycaemic patients’ blood sugar levels 80–150 mg/dl; as a moderate group, euglycaemic patients’ blood sugar levels 80–180 mg/dl. Dysglycaemia was defined as blood sugar levels <80 mg/dl for >5% of measurements, and >150 mg/dl or >180 mg/dl (narrow or moderate groups, respectively) for >10% of measurements. The primary endpoint was ICU mortality (euglycaemia versus dysglycaemia). Results The study comprised 668 patients. When defined as a narrow group, ICU mortality was 3% (four of 135) euglycaemic versus 10% (54/533) dysglycaemic patients (odds ratio [OR] 3.692, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.313, 10.382). When defined as a moderate group, ICU mortality was 6% (21/351) euglycaemic versus 12% (37/317) dysglycaemic patients (OR 2.077, 95% CI 1.188, 3.630). Frequency of severe hypoglycaemia (blood sugar <40 mg/dl) was not different between the narrow and moderate euglycaemic ranges. Conclusions Euglycaemia was associated with lower ICU mortality than dysglycaemia, and incidence of hypoglycaemia was low overall in this study. Based on current published evidence, therapeutic targets should be defined according to individual patient characteristics.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Biochemistry, medical,Cell Biology,Biochemistry,General Medicine

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