4.2 Article

A Comparison Study of Continuous Insulin Infusion Protocols in the Medical Intensive Care Unit: Computer-Guided Vs. Standard Column-Based Algorithms

Journal

JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL MEDICINE
Volume 5, Issue 8, Pages 432-437

Publisher

FRONTLINE MEDICAL COMMUNICATIONS
DOI: 10.1002/jhm.816

Keywords

diabetes; hospital; hyperglycemia; hypoglycemia; insulin infusion; intensive care unit

Funding

  1. NCT [00394524]
  2. Sanofi-aventis
  3. American Diabetes Association [7-03-CR-35]
  4. National Institutes of Health [U01 DK074556-01]
  5. General Clinical Research Center (CTSA) [M01 RR-00039]

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PURPOSE: To compare the safety and efficacy of continuous insulin infusion (CII) via a computer-guided and a standard paper form protocol in a medical intensive care unit (ICU). METHODS: Multicenter randomized trial of 153 ICU patients randomized to CII using the Glucommander (n = 77) or a standard paper protocol (n = 76). Both protocols used glulisine insulin and targeted blood glucose (BG) between 80 mg/dL and 120 mg/dL. RESULTS: The Glucommander resulted in a lower mean BG value (103 +/- 8.8 mg/dL vs. 117 +/- 16.5 mg/dL, P < 0.001) and in a shorter time to reach BG target (4.8 +/- 2.8 vs.7.8 hours +/- 9.1 hours, P < 0.01), and once at target resulted in a higher percentage of BG readings within target (71.0 +/- 17.0% vs. 51.3 +/- 19.7%, P < 0.001) than the standard protocol. Mean insulin infusion rate in the Glucommander was similar to the standard protocol (P = 0.12). The percentages of patients with >= 1 episode of BG <40 mg/dL and <60 mg/dL were 3.9% and 42.9% in the Glucommander and 5.6% and 31.9% in the standard, respectively [P = not significant (NS)]. Repeated measures analyses show that the probabilities of BG reading <40 mg/dL or <60 mg/dL were not significantly different between groups (P = 0.969, P = 0.084) after accounting for within-patient correlations with or without adjusting for time effect. There were no differences between groups in the length of hospital stay (P = 0.704), ICU stay (P = 0.145), or inhospital mortality (P = 0.561). CONCLUSION: Both treatment algorithms resulted in significant improvement in glycemic control in critically ill patients in the medical ICU. The computer-based algorithm resulted in tighter glycemic control without an increased risk of hypoglycemic events compared to the standard paper protocol. Journal of Hospital Medicine 2010;5:432-437. (C) 2010 Society of Hospital Medicine.

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