Association of glycemic control parameters with clinical outcomes in chronic critical illness.
Publication/Presentation Date
9-1-2014
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Chronic critical illness (CCI) is a term used to designate patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation and tracheostomy with associated poor outcomes. The present study assessed the impact of glycemic parameters on outcomes in a CCI population.
METHODS: A retrospective case series was performed including 148 patients in The Mount Sinai Hospital Respiratory Care Unit (2009-2010). Utilizing a semi-parametric mixture model, trajectories for the daily mean blood glucose (BG), BG range, and hypoglycemia rate over time identified low- (n = 87) and high-risk (n = 61) hyperglycemia groups and low- (n = 90) and high-risk (n = 58) hypoglycemia groups. The cohort was also classified into diabetes (DM, n = 48), stress hyperglycemia (SH, n = 85), and normal glucose (n = 15) groups.
RESULTS: Hospital- (28% vs. 13%, P = .0199) and 1-year mortality (66% vs. 46%, P = .0185) rates were significantly greater in the high- versus low-risk hyperglycemia groups, respectively. The hypoglycemia rate (/dL) was lower among ventilator-liberated patients compared to those who failed to liberate (0.092 vs. 0.130, P
CONCLUSION: Tighter glycemic control was associated with improved outcomes in CCI patients with SH but not in CCI patients with diabetes. Confirmation of these findings may lead to stratified glycemic control protocols in CCI patients based on the presence or absence of diabetes.
Volume
20
Issue
9
First Page
884
Last Page
893
ISSN
1530-891X
Published In/Presented At
Schulman, R. C., Moshier, E. L., Rho, L., Casey, M. F., Godbold, J. H., & Mechanick, J. I. (2014). Association of glycemic control parameters with clinical outcomes in chronic critical illness. Endocrine practice : official journal of the American College of Endocrinology and the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists, 20(9), 884–893. https://doi.org/10.4158/EP13324.OR
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
24641919
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article