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Circulation. 2009 Dec 15;120(24):2429-37. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.108.837765.
In patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI), hyperglycemia predicts death, but the prognostic significance of hypoglycemia is controversial.
We evaluated the prognostic significance of hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia in 30 536 AMI patients in a post hoc analysis of 2 large trials of glucose-insulin-potassium therapy in AMI. Glucose levels on admission and at 6 and 24 hours after admission, as well as 30-day mortality, were documented. In separate multivariable Cox models for admission and postadmission glucose, we compared the prognostic value of hypoglycemia (< or =70 mg/dL) and hyperglycemia (> or =140 mg/dL) with normoglycemia (>70 and <140 mg/dL). Analyses were repeated with hypoglycemia defined as glucose < or =60 mg/dL and in key subgroups based on diabetes or insulin (glucose-insulin-potassium) allocation status. Both high and low percentiles of admission glucose predicted increased 30-day mortality. However, for postadmission glucose, this U-shaped relationship was attenuated so that only high and not low glucose levels remained prognostic. Hyperglycemia (> or =140 mg/dL), both on admission (adjusted hazard ratio 1.43, 95% confidence interval 1.32 to 1.56, P<0.0001) and after admission (adjusted hazard ratio 1.47, 95% confidence interval 1.31 to 1.66, P<0.0001), predicted death compared with normoglycemia. In contrast, hypoglycemia (glucose < or =70 mg/dL) on admission was not prognostic (adjusted hazard ratio 1.16, 95% confidence interval 0.84 to 1.62, P=0.37), nor was postadmission hypoglycemia (adjusted hazard ratio 0.96, 95% confidence interval 0.72 to 1.26, P=0.75). Exploratory analyses that redefined hypoglycemia as glucose < or =60 mg/dL showed consistent results, as did analyses restricted to diabetic patients (18% of the study population). Postadmission hypoglycemia was more common in insulin (glucose-insulin-potassium)-treated patients (6.9%) than in untreated patients (3.4%) but did not predict mortality in either subgroup.
Both admission and postadmission hyperglycemia predict 30-day death in AMI patients. In contrast, only hypoglycemia on admission predicted death, and this relationship dissipated after admission. These data suggest hypoglycemia may not be a direct mediator of adverse outcomes in AMI patients.
在急性心肌梗死(AMI)患者中,高血糖预示着死亡,但低血糖的预后意义仍存在争议。
我们对 2 项大剂量胰岛素葡萄糖-钾治疗 AMI 的临床试验进行了事后分析,评估了 30536 例 AMI 患者中低血糖和高血糖的预后意义。记录入院时和入院后 6 小时和 24 小时的血糖水平以及 30 天死亡率。在分别针对入院和入院后血糖的多变量 Cox 模型中,我们比较了低血糖(<=70mg/dL)和高血糖(>=140mg/dL)与正常血糖(>70 且 <140mg/dL)的预后价值。根据糖尿病或胰岛素(葡萄糖-胰岛素-钾)分配情况,用低血糖定义为血糖 <=60mg/dL 并在关键亚组中进行了重复分析。入院时的高血糖和低血糖百分位数均预示着 30 天死亡率增加。然而,对于入院后血糖,这种 U 形关系减弱,只有高血糖水平仍然具有预后意义。与正常血糖相比,高血糖(>=140mg/dL),无论是入院时(校正后的危险比 1.43,95%置信区间 1.32 至 1.56,P<0.0001)还是入院后(校正后的危险比 1.47,95%置信区间 1.31 至 1.66,P<0.0001),均预示着死亡。相比之下,入院时的低血糖(血糖 <=70mg/dL)没有预后意义(校正后的危险比 1.16,95%置信区间 0.84 至 1.62,P=0.37),入院后低血糖也没有预后意义(校正后的危险比 0.96,95%置信区间 0.72 至 1.26,P=0.75)。将低血糖重新定义为血糖 <=60mg/dL 的探索性分析显示出一致的结果,对糖尿病患者(研究人群的 18%)进行的分析也是如此。入院后低血糖在接受胰岛素(葡萄糖-胰岛素-钾)治疗的患者(6.9%)中比未接受治疗的患者(3.4%)更常见,但在两个亚组中均未预测死亡率。
入院时和入院后高血糖均预示着 AMI 患者 30 天死亡。相比之下,只有入院时的低血糖预示着死亡,入院后这种关系就消失了。这些数据表明,低血糖可能不是 AMI 患者不良预后的直接介导因素。