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Diabetes Technol. Ther. · Feb 2017
Impact of a Paper-Based Dynamic Insulin Infusion Protocol on Glycemic Variability, Time in Target, and Hypoglycemic Risk: A Stepped Wedge Trial in Medical Intensive Care Unit Patients.
- Antoine Clergeau, Jean-Jacques Parienti, Yves Reznik, Deborah Clergeau, Amelie Seguin, Xavier Valette, du Cheyron Damien D 3 Intensive Care Unit, University Hospital of Caen , Caen, France ., and Michael Joubert.
- 1 Diabetes Care Unit, University Hospital of Caen , Caen, France .
- Diabetes Technol. Ther. 2017 Feb 1; 19 (2): 115-123.
BackgroundStress-induced hyperglycemia is a common feature of intensive care unit (ICU) patients. Besides mean blood glucose (BG) level, glucose variability and hypoglycemia have been highlighted as independent predictors of ICU and hospital mortality. Recent ICU recommendations suggest using insulin infusion protocols that can minimize glucose variability and hypoglycemic risk. Our aim was to assess the efficacy, safety, and acceptance by nurses of a paper-based simple dynamic insulin protocol compared with those by nurses of a paper-based static protocol.MethodsThis is a 1 year stepped-wedge study that compared a static sliding scale protocol (SP - static protocol) with a validated dynamic paper-based intravenous insulin infusion protocol (DP - dynamic protocol) in medical ICU patients of a single university hospital. Patients with stress-induced hyperglycemia >9.9 mmol/L and ≥48 h intravenous insulin infusion were included in this trial.ResultsOne hundred thirty-one patients were included and received continuous intravenous insulin infusion managed with SP (n = 65) or DP (n = 66). Glucose variability was significantly higher in the SP group than in the DP group (mean average glucose excursion index: 0.90 [0.00-1.91] mmol/L vs. 0.00 [0.00-0.90] mmol/L, respectively; P = 0.001). The percentage of time spent in the target range (7.7-9.9 mmol/L) was lower in the SP group than in the DP group (42.5% [28.8%-54.2%] vs. 47.5% [36.6%-57.1%]; P = 0.037). Low BG (<4.4 mmol/L) and hypoglycemia (<3.3 mmol/L) were more frequent in the SP group than in the DP group. According to a satisfaction survey, this protocol was well accepted by nurses.ConclusionsOur simple and feasible paper-based, dynamic insulin infusion protocol reduced glycemic variability and hypoglycemic risk in a medical ICU.
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