Krinsley James S, Maurer Paula, Holewinski Sharon, Hayes Roy, McComsey Douglas, Umpierrez Guillermo E, Nasraway Stanley A
Division of Critical Care, Department of Medicine, Stamford Hospital, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, Stamford, CT.
Medical Decision Network, Charlottesville, VA.
Mayo Clin Proc. 2017 Jul;92(7):1019-1029. doi: 10.1016/j.mayocp.2017.04.015. Epub 2017 Jun 20.
To describe the relationships among glycemic control, diabetes mellitus (DM) status, and mortality in critically ill patients from intensive care unit (ICU) admission to hospital discharge.
This is a retrospective investigation of 6387 ICU patients with 5 or more blood glucose (BG) tests and 4462 ICU survivors admitted to 2 academic medical centers from July 1, 2010, through December 31, 2014. We studied the relationships among mean BG level, hypoglycemia (BG level <70 mg/dL [to convert to mmol/L, multiply by 0.0555]), high glucose variability (coefficient of variation ≥20%), DM status, and mortality.
The ICU mortality for patients without DM with ICU mean BG levels of 80 to less than 110, 110 to less than 140, 140 to less than 180, and at least 180 mg/dL was 4.50%, 7.30%, 12.16%, and 32.82%, respectively. Floor mortality for patients without DM with these BG ranges was 2.74%, 2.64%, 7.88%, and 5.66%, respectively. The ICU and floor mean BG levels of 80 to less than 110 and 110 to less than 140 mg/dL were independently associated with reduced ICU and floor mortality compared with mean BG levels of 140 to less than 180 mg/dL in patients without DM (odds ratio [OR] [95% CI]: 0.43 (0.28-0.66), 0.62 (0.45-0.85), 0.41 (0.23-0.75), and 0.40 (0.25-0.63), respectively) but not in patients with DM. Both ICU and floor hypoglycemia and increased glucose variability were strongly associated with ICU and floor mortality in patients without DM, and less so in those with DM. The independent association of dysglycemia occurring in either setting with mortality was cumulative in patients without DM.
These findings support the importance of glucose control across the entire trajectory of hospitalization in critically ill patients and suggest that the BG target of 140 to less than 180 mg/dL is not appropriate for patients without DM. The optimal BG target for patients with DM remains uncertain.
描述危重症患者从重症监护病房(ICU)入院至出院期间血糖控制、糖尿病(DM)状态与死亡率之间的关系。
这是一项回顾性研究,纳入了2010年7月1日至2014年12月31日期间在2家学术医疗中心收治的6387例接受了5次或更多次血糖(BG)检测的ICU患者以及4462例ICU幸存者。我们研究了平均BG水平、低血糖(BG水平<70mg/dL[换算为mmol/L时,乘以0.0555])、高血糖变异性(变异系数≥20%)、DM状态与死亡率之间的关系。
ICU平均BG水平为80至<110、110至<140、140至<180以及至少180mg/dL的非DM患者的ICU死亡率分别为4.50%、7.30%、12.16%和32.82%。这些BG范围的非DM患者的病房死亡率分别为2.74%、2.64%、7.88%和5.66%。与非DM患者中平均BG水平为140至<180mg/dL相比,平均BG水平为80至<110和110至<140mg/dL的非DM患者的ICU和病房死亡率独立降低(优势比[OR][95%CI]:分别为0.43(0.28 - 0.66)、0.62(0.45 - 0.85)、0.41(0.23 - 0.75)和0.40(0.25 - 0.63)),但DM患者并非如此。ICU和病房低血糖以及血糖变异性增加在非DM患者中与ICU和病房死亡率密切相关,而在DM患者中相关性较小。在非DM患者中,任何一种情况下发生的血糖异常与死亡率的独立关联具有累积性。
这些发现支持了危重症患者在整个住院过程中血糖控制的重要性,并表明140至<180mg/dL的BG目标不适用于非DM患者。DM患者的最佳BG目标仍不确定。