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Hospital-acquired complications in intensive care unit patients with diabetes: a before-and-after study of a conventional versus liberal glucose control protocol

Version 2 2024-06-04, 05:46
Version 1 2021-04-01, 09:48
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 05:46 authored by N Luethi, L Cioccari, G Eastwood, P Biesenbach, R Morgan, S Sprogis, H Young, L Peck, C Knee Chong, S Moore, K Moon, EI Ekinci, AM Deane, R Bellomo, J Mårtensson
Background: Critically ill patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) are at increased risk of in-hospital complications and the optimal glycemic target for such patients remains unclear. A more liberal approach to glucose control has recently been suggested for patients with DM, but uncertainty remains regarding its impact on complications. Methods: We aimed to test the hypothesis that complications would be more common with a liberal glycemic target in ICU patients with DM. Thus, we compared hospital-acquired complications in the first 400 critically ill patients with DM included in a sequential before-and-after trial of liberal (glucose target: 10-14 mmol/L) vs conventional (glucose target: 6-10 mmol/L) glucose control. Results: Of the 400 patients studied, 165 (82.5%) patients in the liberal and 177 (88.5%) in the conventional-control group were coded for at least one hospital-acquired complication (P = 0.09). When comparing clinically relevant complications diagnosed between ICU admission and hospital discharge, we found no difference in the odds for infectious (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] for liberal-control: 1.15 [95% CI: 0.68-1.96], P = 0.60), cardiovascular (aOR 1.40 [95% CI: 0.63-3.12], P = 0.41) or neurological complications (aOR: 1.07 [95% CI: 0.61-1.86], P = 0.81), acute kidney injury (aOR 0.83 [95% CI: 0.43-1.58], P = 0.56) or hospital mortality (aOR: 1.09 [95% CI: 0.59-2.02], P = 0.77) between the liberal and the conventional-control group. Conclusion: In this prospective before-and-after study, liberal glucose control was not associated with an increased risk of hospital-acquired infectious, cardiovascular, renal or neurological complications in critically ill patients with diabetes.

History

Journal

Acta anaesthesiologica Scandinavica

Volume

63

Pagination

761-768

Location

Chichester, Eng.

ISSN

0001-5172

eISSN

1399-6576

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

6

Publisher

Wiley

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