Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Am J Med. 2012 Oct;125(10):1036.e17-23. doi: 10.1016/j.amjmed.2012.01.026. Epub 2012 Aug 2.
Our goal was to determine the association between random admission hyperglycemia and new diagnosis of diabetes after discharge in patients hospitalized with pneumonia.
Clinical data, including the Pneumonia Severity Index, were prospectively collected on all 2124 patients without diabetes admitted with pneumonia to 6 hospitals in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Admission glucose was classified as: normal (4.0-6.0 mmol/L, reference group) versus mild (6.1-7.7 mmol/L), moderate (7.8-11.0 mmol/L), and severe (11.1-20.0 mmol/L) stress hyperglycemia. New diagnosis of diabetes over 5 years was ascertained using well-validated criteria within linked administrative databases. Multivariable Cox models were used, and sensitivity, specificity, and likelihood ratios were calculated.
Mean age was 68 years; 1091 (51%) were male, and 1418 (67%) had stress hyperglycemia. Over 5 years, 194 (14%) with stress hyperglycemia were diagnosed with diabetes. Compared with the 45 of 706 (6%) incidences of diabetes in normal glycemia patients (4.0-6.0 mmol/L), a strong graded increase in risk of new diabetes existed with increasing hyperglycemia: mild (59 of 841 [7%]; adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 1.09; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.74-1.61) versus moderate (86 of 473 [18%]; aHR 2.99; 95% CI, 2.07-4.31) versus severe (49 of 104 [47%]; aHR 11.43; 95% CI, 7.50-17.42). Among moderate-to-severe hyperglycemia (≥7.8 mmol/L) patients, the sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative likelihood ratios for new diabetes were 57%, 77%, 2.1, and 0.6, respectively, with a number-needed-to-evaluate of 5 to detect one new case of diabetes.
Moderate-to-severe random hyperglycemia in pneumonia patients admitted to the hospital is strongly associated with new diagnosis of diabetes. Opportunistic evaluation for diabetes may be warranted in this group.
我们旨在确定住院肺炎患者入院时随机高血糖与出院后新发糖尿病诊断之间的关联。
在加拿大阿尔伯塔省埃德蒙顿的 6 家医院,前瞻性地收集了 2124 名无糖尿病住院肺炎患者的临床数据,包括肺炎严重指数。入院时血糖分为:正常(4.0-6.0mmol/L,参考组)与轻度(6.1-7.7mmol/L)、中度(7.8-11.0mmol/L)和重度(11.1-20.0mmol/L)应激性高血糖。通过与链接的行政数据库中经过良好验证的标准,确定 5 年内新发糖尿病的诊断。采用多变量 Cox 模型,并计算灵敏度、特异度和似然比。
平均年龄为 68 岁;1091 名(51%)为男性,1418 名(67%)有应激性高血糖。5 年内,194 名(14%)应激性高血糖患者被诊断为糖尿病。与正常血糖患者(4.0-6.0mmol/L)中 45 例(6%)的糖尿病发生率相比,随着高血糖程度的增加,新发糖尿病的风险呈强梯度增加:轻度(841 例中 59 例[7%];校正后危险比[aHR]1.09;95%置信区间[CI],0.74-1.61)与中度(473 例中 86 例[18%];aHR 2.99;95%CI,2.07-4.31)与重度(104 例中 49 例[47%];aHR 11.43;95%CI,7.50-17.42)相比。在中重度高血糖(≥7.8mmol/L)患者中,新发糖尿病的灵敏度、特异度、阳性和阴性似然比分别为 57%、77%、2.1 和 0.6,检测一例新发糖尿病需要评估的病例数为 5。
住院肺炎患者中中重度随机高血糖与新发糖尿病诊断密切相关。在该人群中可能需要进行机会性糖尿病评估。