Cerner Corporation.
Eli Lilly and Company.
BMJ Open Diabetes Res Care. 2016 Apr 4;4(1):e000160. doi: 10.1136/bmjdrc-2015-000160. eCollection 2016.
Hypoglycemia is a serious complication of diabetes treatment. This retrospective observational study characterized hypoglycemia-related hospital emergency room (ER) and inpatient (in-pt) admissions and identified risk factors for 30-day all-cause and hypoglycemia-related readmission.
4476 hypoglycemia-related ER and in-pt encounters with discharge dates from 1/1/2009 to 3/31/2014 were identified in a large, multicenter electronic health record database. Outcomes were 30-day all-cause ER/hospital readmission and hypoglycemia-related readmission. Multivariable logistic regression methods identified risk factors for both outcomes.
1095 (24.5%) encounters had ER/hospital all-cause readmission within 30 days and 158 (14.4%) of these were hypoglycemia-related. Predictors of all-cause 30-day readmission included recent exposure to a hospital/nursing home (NH)/skilled nursing facility (SNF; OR 1.985, p<0.001); age 25-34 and 35-44 (OR 2.334 and 1.996, respectively, compared with age 65-74, both p<0.001); and African-American (AA) race versus all other race categories (OR 1.427, p=0.011). Other factors positively associated with readmission include chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, cerebrovascular disease, cardiac dysrhythmias, congestive heart disease, hypertension, and mood disorders. Predictors of readmissions attributable to hypoglycemia included recent exposure to a hospital/NH/SNF (OR 2.299, p<0.001), AA race (OR 1.722, p=0.002), age 35-44 (OR 3.484, compared with age 65-74, p<0.001), hypertension (OR 1.891, p=0.019), and delirium/dementia and other cognitive disorders (OR 1.794, p=0.038). Obesity was protective against 30-day hypoglycemia-related readmission (OR 0.505, p=0.017).
Factors associated with 30-day all-cause and hypoglycemia-related readmission among patients with diabetic hypoglycemia include recent exposure to hospital/SNF/NH, adults <45 years, AAs, and several cardiovascular and respiratory-related comorbid conditions.
低血糖是糖尿病治疗的严重并发症。本回顾性观察研究描述了低血糖相关的医院急诊(ER)和住院(in-pt)入院情况,并确定了 30 天全因和低血糖相关再入院的危险因素。
在一个大型的多中心电子健康记录数据库中,确定了 2009 年 1 月 1 日至 2014 年 3 月 31 日期间因低血糖导致的 4476 例 ER 和 in-pt 就诊,并记录出院日期。结果为 30 天内全因 ER/医院再入院和低血糖相关再入院。多变量逻辑回归方法确定了两种结果的危险因素。
1095 例(24.5%)就诊者在 30 天内发生了全因 ER/医院再入院,其中 158 例(14.4%)与低血糖有关。全因 30 天再入院的预测因素包括近期暴露于医院/疗养院(NH)/熟练护理机构(SNF)(OR 1.985,p<0.001);年龄 25-34 岁和 35-44 岁(OR 分别为 2.334 和 1.996,与 65-74 岁年龄相比,均 p<0.001);以及非裔美国人(AA)种族与所有其他种族类别(OR 1.427,p=0.011)。其他与再入院相关的正相关因素包括慢性阻塞性肺疾病、脑血管疾病、心律失常、充血性心力衰竭、高血压和情绪障碍。低血糖相关再入院的预测因素包括近期暴露于医院/NH/SNF(OR 2.299,p<0.001)、AA 种族(OR 1.722,p=0.002)、年龄 35-44 岁(OR 3.484,与 65-74 岁年龄相比,p<0.001)、高血压(OR 1.891,p=0.019)和谵妄/痴呆和其他认知障碍(OR 1.794,p=0.038)。肥胖对 30 天内低血糖相关再入院有保护作用(OR 0.505,p=0.017)。
患有糖尿病性低血糖症的患者 30 天内全因和低血糖相关再入院的相关因素包括近期暴露于医院/SNF/NH、<45 岁的成年人、非裔美国人,以及多种心血管和呼吸系统相关的合并症。