Suppr超能文献

厘清重症监护中的血糖与死亡率。

Untangling glycaemia and mortality in critical care.

机构信息

Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Canterbury, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch, New Zealand.

GIGA - In Silico Medicine, University of Liège, Allée du 6 Août 19, bâtiment B5a, 4000, Liège, Belgium.

出版信息

Crit Care. 2017 Jun 24;21(1):152. doi: 10.1186/s13054-017-1725-y.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Hyperglycaemia is associated with adverse outcomes in the intensive care unit, and initial studies suggested outcome benefits of glycaemic control (GC). However, subsequent studies often failed to replicate these results, and they were often unable to achieve consistent, safe control, raising questions about the benefit or harm of GC as well as the nature of the association of glycaemia with mortality and clinical outcomes. In this study, we evaluated if non-survivors are harder to control than survivors and determined if glycaemic outcome is a function of patient condition and eventual outcome or of the glycaemic control provided.

METHODS

Clinically validated, model-based, hour-to-hour insulin sensitivity (SI) and its hour-to-hour variability (%ΔSI) were identified over the first 72 h of therapy in 145 patients (119 survivors, 26 non-survivors). In hypothesis testing, we compared distributions of SI and %ΔSI in 6-hourly blocks for survivors and non-survivors. In equivalence testing, we assessed if differences in these distributions, based on blood glucose measurement error, were clinically significant.

RESULTS

SI level was never equivalent between survivors and non-survivors (95% CI of percentage difference in medians outside ±12%). Non-survivors had higher SI, ranging from 9% to 47% higher overall in 6-h blocks, and this difference became statistically significant as glycaemic control progressed. %ΔSI was equivalent between survivors and non-survivors for all 6-hourly blocks (95% CI of difference in medians within ±12%) and decreased in general over time as glycaemic control progressed.

CONCLUSIONS

Whereas non-survivors had higher SI levels, variability was equivalent to that of survivors over the first 72 h. These results indicate survivors and non-survivors are equally controllable, given an effective glycaemic control protocol, suggesting that glycaemia level and variability, and thus the association between glycaemia and outcome, are essentially determined by the control provided rather than by underlying patient or metabolic condition.

摘要

背景

高血糖与重症监护病房的不良结局相关,最初的研究表明血糖控制(GC)有获益。然而,随后的研究往往无法复制这些结果,而且往往无法实现一致、安全的控制,这引发了人们对 GC 的益处或危害以及血糖与死亡率和临床结局之间关联性质的质疑。在这项研究中,我们评估了非存活者是否比存活者更难控制,并确定血糖结局是否是患者状况和最终结局的函数,还是提供的血糖控制的函数。

方法

在 145 例患者(119 例存活者,26 例非存活者)的治疗前 72 小时内,通过临床验证的基于模型的每小时胰岛素敏感性(SI)及其每小时变异性(%ΔSI)被识别。在假设检验中,我们比较了存活者和非存活者在 6 小时块中的 SI 和 %ΔSI 分布。在等效性检验中,我们评估了基于血糖测量误差,这些分布差异是否具有临床意义。

结果

SI 水平在存活者和非存活者之间从未等效(中位数差异的 95%置信区间在±12%以外)。非存活者的 SI 更高,在 6 小时块中总体高出 9%至 47%,随着血糖控制的进展,这种差异变得具有统计学意义。%ΔSI 在所有 6 小时块中在存活者和非存活者之间等效(中位数差异的 95%置信区间在±12%内),并且随着血糖控制的进展总体上逐渐降低。

结论

虽然非存活者的 SI 水平较高,但在最初的 72 小时内,其变异性与存活者等效。这些结果表明,在有效的血糖控制方案下,存活者和非存活者同样可控制,这表明血糖水平和变异性,以及血糖与结局之间的关联,基本上是由提供的控制决定的,而不是由患者或代谢状况决定的。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/2678/5482947/a8f52cf22e6a/13054_2017_1725_Fig1_HTML.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验