Department of Pharmacy, The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland.
Department of Pediatrics, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
Pharmacotherapy. 2019 Jul;39(7):741-748. doi: 10.1002/phar.2281. Epub 2019 Jun 6.
Newly diagnosed pediatric patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1D) can be underweight, overweight, or normal weight at presentation. Study objectives were to determine if, across weight categories, admission body weight (ABW)-based initial insulin glargine dosing resulted in similar fasting blood glucose responses on day of discharge, how initial ABW-based doses differed from doses at outpatient follow-up, and whether an ideal body weight (IBW) would provide a better estimate of body weight after discharge.
Retrospective chart review.
Urban tertiary academic medical center.
Eighty-one pediatric patients newly diagnosed with T1D who started therapy with subcutaneous insulin glargine between October 2014 and October 2016; patients were categorized by weight using body mass index (BMI) percentiles (underweight, normal weight, or overweight/obese).
Data on patient parameters from hospitalization to outpatient physician follow-up were collected. The McLaren, Moore, and BMI IBW methods were used to calculate IBW for each patient; these IBWs were compared with weights at outpatient follow-up. Initial insulin glargine doses were similar among all weight groups: median (range) 0.299 (0.227-0.4), 0.297 (0.204-0.421), and 0.291 (0.194-0.394) units/kg/dose, respectively, for the underweight, normal weight, and overweight/obese groups. No significant differences in discharge fasting glucose level or insulin glargine dose change from admission to first outpatient follow-up visit were noted. Underweight patients gained significantly more weight within 60 days after discharge compared with normal and overweight/obese patients, (median 16.3% vs 7.7% and 5.7%, respectively; p=0.002), aligning closest with the McLaren IBW. ABW was the best estimate of weight at outpatient follow-up in the overweight/obese patient group.
For children who presented underweight, the McLaren IBW method was the best predictor of outpatient dose and body weight, whereas ABW was the best estimate in overweight and obese patients. Further investigation of the role of IBW- or ABW-based dosing methods in underweight pediatric patients with T1D may assist in optimal dosing.
新诊断为 1 型糖尿病(T1D)的儿科患者在就诊时可能体重不足、超重或正常。研究目的是确定在体重类别中,基于入院体重(ABW)的初始甘精胰岛素剂量是否会导致出院当天的空腹血糖反应相似,初始 ABW 剂量与门诊随访时的剂量有何不同,以及理想体重(IBW)是否能更好地估计出院后的体重。
回顾性图表审查。
城市三级学术医疗中心。
81 名新诊断为 T1D 的儿科患者,于 2014 年 10 月至 2016 年 10 月期间开始接受皮下胰岛素甘精胰岛素治疗;患者根据体重指数(BMI)百分位数(体重不足、正常体重或超重/肥胖)进行分类。
从住院到门诊医生随访期间收集患者参数数据。使用 McLaren、Moore 和 BMI IBW 方法计算每位患者的 IBW;将这些 IBWs 与门诊随访时的体重进行比较。初始甘精胰岛素剂量在所有体重组中相似:体重不足、正常体重和超重/肥胖组的中位数(范围)分别为 0.299(0.227-0.4)、0.297(0.204-0.421)和 0.291(0.194-0.394)单位/公斤/剂量。从入院到第一次门诊随访,出院时空腹血糖水平或胰岛素甘精胰岛素剂量变化无显著差异。与正常体重和超重/肥胖患者相比,体重不足的患者在出院后 60 天内体重增加明显更多(中位数分别为 16.3%、7.7%和 5.7%;p=0.002),与 McLaren IBW 最接近。在超重/肥胖患者组中,ABW 是门诊随访时体重的最佳估计值。
对于体重不足的儿童,McLaren IBW 方法是预测门诊剂量和体重的最佳方法,而 ABW 是超重和肥胖患者的最佳估计值。进一步研究基于 IBW 或 ABW 的剂量方法在 T1D 体重不足的儿科患者中的作用,可能有助于实现最佳剂量。