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Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management
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Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Mar 29, 2015

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Page 1: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management

Page 2: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points

• Avoid the temptation to “ignore” the patient’s diabetes

• Try to distinguish type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Patients with type 1 diabetes will require at least some basal insulin at ALL times, even when NPO.

• Assess pre-admission medications and recent glycemic control.

• Diet should be individualized, based on body weight and other comorbidities. Consider a nutrition services consult.

Page 3: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

General Points, continued

• Order fingerstick glucose monitoring 4 times daily in all patients with diabetes (pre-meal and hs if eating; q6h if NPO) for at least the first 48 hours

• Glucose targets in non-pregnant, non-ICU patients should be 90-130 mg/dl, with glucose readings before meals. *

• Revise insulin doses every 1-2 days based on results of fingerstick glucose testing.

* Current position statements suggest premeal targets <110 mg/dl, and < 180 mg/dl at all other times for non-ICU patients

Page 4: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Blood Glucose Targets

• Labor and Delivery– 100 mg/dl

• Critical Care Units– 110 mg/dl

• Non-Critical Care Units– 90-130 mg/dl pre-meal (midpoint 110 mg/dl)– 180 mg/dl maximal

American Diabetes Association, 2005

Page 5: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Glucose Measurements

• The standard measure is venous or plasma glucose• Whole blood glucose is 12-15% less than venous

glucose, and may be influenced by hematocrit• Arterial blood is 7% greater that venous blood, with less

of a difference in fasting or postabsorptive states• Capillary (fingerstick) blood is similar to arterial blood• From a practical standpoint, capillary blood or arterial

blood are used for glucose measurements in hospital, and in a fasting state, are sufficiently close to venous measurements to guide therapy

Page 6: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

General Points, continued

• Do NOT leave patients on regular insulin “sliding scale” as the ONLY form of treatment.

• Try to approximate the at home regimen as long as possible BEFORE discharge

• Utilize the admission as a teaching opportunity for those patients who lack knowledge about their diabetes. Consider Diabetes Education consultation.

Page 7: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

For patients treated with oral agents prior to admission:

• NPO, well-controlled on oral hypoglycemic agents (OHA): – D/C OHA and use TEMPORARY insulin

“sliding scale”• NPO, well-controlled on oral agent that does not

result in hypoglycemia:– D/C metformin– Thiazolidinediones may be continued– D/C alpha-glucosidase inhibitors

Page 8: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

For patients treated with oral agents prior to admission:

• NPO, poorly controlled on OHA:– Use insulin. “Sliding scale” can be used for

24-48 hours. If it is clear that patients will require insulin on discharge, proceed with the addition of a long/intermediate-acting insulin

Page 9: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

For patients treated with oral agents prior to admission:

• Eating, well-controlled on OHA or other oral agent:– Continue OHA– D/C metformin if unstable, in CHF, dehydrated

or with impaired renal function– Continue thiazolidinediones– Continue alpha-glucosidase inhibitors

Page 10: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

For patients treated with oral agents prior to admission:

• Eating, but poorly controlled on oral agents:– Consider adding a second agent, HOWEVER,

since this often takes weeks to optimize, it is usually preferable to proceed with insulin therapy.

Page 11: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

For NPO insulin-treated patients:

Type 1 DMConsider using an iv insulin

infusion. (This technique is underutilized in hospital)

Alternatively, give 1/2-2/3 of intermediate/long-acting insulin + “sliding scale”

Unless markedly hyperglycemic, provide D5W

Check BG every 6 hours (q 1-2 hours on iv insulin)

NOTE: Insulin is NEVER to be stopped entirely in patients with type 1 diabetes.

Type 2 DMInsulin-treated patients may

demonstrated excellent control when diet restricted alone, and may require only “sliding scale”

Alternatively, give ½ of long/intermediate-acting insulin + “sliding scale”

Unless markedly hyperglycemic, provide D5W with insulin

Check BG every 6 hoursNOTE: Significantly insulinopenic

patients are more easily managed as if they had type 1 diabetes, i.e., with iv insulin

Page 12: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

For insulin-treated patients who are eating:

Continue usual insulin regimen.

It may be desirable for the knowledgeable and skilled patient to perform diabetes self-management while in hospital.

Page 13: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Fingerstick Glucose Monitoring

• Perform 4 times daily (ac and hs) for patients on most insulin regimens.

• Perform 1-2 times daily for patients on oral agents or only one insulin injection, if in good control.

• Fingerstick glucose should be recorded on a bedside log, along with the corresponding insulin administered (all types of insulin)

Page 14: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Hypoglycemia orders:

• Patient alert and cooperative:– Give 15 gm CHO

• 4 oz juice/soda is 15 gm carbohydrate• 3-2.5 inch graham crackers is 15 gm carbohydrate

– Recheck in 15 minutes, repeat until glucose > 70 mg/dl

• Non-alert patient:– Give 25 gm dextrose iv (1/2 amp D50W) or 1 mg glucagon im (if

no venous access). Recheck glucose after 5-10 minutes, retreat as necessary.

• If severe, or related to OHA or long-acting insulin, consider iv dextrose as D5W or D10W.

• Investigate cause and modify treatment regimen as indicated.

Page 15: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Think Twice When Ordering “Sliding Scales”

• Regular insulin “sliding scale” should be discouraged as the sole diabetes treatment in hospitalized patients, since it does little more than respond in a belated fashion to poor glycemic control.

• Instead, treatment of hyperglycemia in a proactive fashion is preferred, with use of long-acting insulins in combination with short and rapid acting insulins, i.e., physiologic insulin replacement.

• In certain patients who are NPO, or in those in whom it is difficult to predict requirements, “sliding scale” for 24-48 hours is acceptable. Patients with severe insulin deficiency (all type 1 and some type 2 patients) must also be provided basal insulin replacement.

Page 16: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.
Page 17: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Peri-Op Orders:General Points

• Type 1 diabetes:– Patients need insulin at ALL times, even NPO.– Place on iv insulin– If on HS insulin glargine, this can be given as usual

• Type 2 diabetes:– Hold OHA, metformin, and alpha-glucosidase inhibitors on the

day of procedure. Hold sustained release metformin the day before.

– Thiazolidinediones can be given, if pills allowed.– If on insulin, give ½ of intermediate insulin (NPH) in the morning,

or continue insulin glargine» OR

– Place on iv insulin

Page 18: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Intravenous Insulin Infusion

• Indications:– Diabetic ketoacidosis*– Hyperosmolar hyperglycemic state*– Uncontrolled diabetes despite subcutaneous insulin– Total parenteral nutrition (TPN)– Patients with type 1 diabetes who are NPO,

perioperative, in labor and delivery– Any patient post-MI with hyperglycemia– Any ICU patient with hyperglycemia

* Should NOT use preprinted iv insulin orders. See Diabetes Care 2004;27(1):S94

Page 19: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Continuous Intravenous Insulin

• Discontinue previous insulin orders (there may be overlapping basal insulin)

• Carbohydrate is to be given at the same time– Enteral feeding– CVN– D5W 0.45 NS

Page 20: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Continuous Intravenous Insulin

• Insulin infusion is Regular insulin 100 units/100 ml of Sodium Chloride 0.9 %

(1 unit of insulin/1 ml of NS)• Target blood sugar can be specified but is

recommended to be 90-130 mg/dl

Page 21: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Dose Adjustments

• Four algorithms with insulin infusion rates for blood sugar ranges are used to determine dose adjustments

• To make a dose adjustment you need to know– Algorithm being used– Current blood sugar – Previous blood sugar

Page 22: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Dose Adjustments

• The previous blood sugar compared with the current blood sugar may determine the need to – Move up to the next higher algorithm (e.g.,

from algorithm 2 to algorithm 3) or – Down to the next lesser algorithm (e.g., from

algorithm 2 to algorithm 1)

Page 23: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Dose Adjustments

• Current blood sugar and where it is located in the algorithm being used may determine the dose adjustment– Blood sugar of 126 mg/dl in algorithm 2 is a

rate of 1.5 units/hour• If the blood sugar is greater than 140 mg/dl and

it is increasing, it will be necessary to move up to the next higher algorithm

Page 24: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Rate Adjustment Criteria

Previous Blood Sugar

Current Blood Sugar

Adjustment

Greater than 200 mg/dl

Decreased by at least 60 mg/dl

Stay in the same algorithm; adjust rate as per algorithm

Greater than 200 mg/dl

Does not decrease by at least 60 mg/dl (or is increasing)

Move up to the next higher algorithm; adjust rate as per algorithm

Page 25: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Rate Adjustment Criteria

Previous Blood Sugar

Current Blood Sugar

Adjustment

140-200 mg/dl Decreased by at least 30 mg/dl

Stay in same algorithm; adjust rate as per algorithm

140-200 mg/dl Does not decrease by alt least 30 mg/dl (or is increasing)

Move up to the next higher algorithm; adjust rate as per algorithm

Page 26: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Rate Adjustment Criteria

Previous Blood Sugar

Current Blood Sugar

Adjustment

Any value Decreased by more than 100 mg/dl in one hour

Move down to the next lesser algorithm; adjust rate as per algorithm; if already in algorithm 1, decrease the infusion by half

Page 27: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Rate Adjustment Criteria

Current Blood Sugar

Adjustment

Blood sugar less than 70 mg/dl

STOP THE INFUSION. Recheck blood sugar every 15 minutes. Resume insulin infusion at the next lesser algorithm when the glucose is greater than 110 mg/dl. If already using algorithm 1, decrease the infusion by half.

The half life of intravenous insulin is 5-10 minutes.

Page 28: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Rate Adjustment Criteria

Current Blood Sugar

Adjustment

Blood sugar less than 50 mg/dl

STOP THE INFUSION. If patient alert and able to take fluids , give 15 grams of carbohydrate orally. If patient confused or unconscious, or NPO, give 25 ml of 50 % Dextrose IV. Recheck blood sugar every 15 minutes. Repeat oral carbohydrate or IV 50% Dextrose every 15 minutes until blood sugar is greater than 70 mg/dl. Resume insulin infusion at the next lesser algorithm when the glucose is greater than 110 mg/dl. If already using algorithm 1, decrease the infusion by half.

Page 29: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Scheduled Subcutaneous Insulin Orders

• Pre-meal or bolus insulin– Insulin type – Number of units

• Basal insulin – Insulin type– Number of units

Page 30: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Scheduled Subcutaneous Insulin Orders

• Pre-meal correction insulin algorithms based on insulin sensitivity– Low dose algorithm for patients who require up to 40

units of insulin /day– Medium dose algorithm for patients requiring 40-80 of

insulin/day– High dose algorithm for patient requiring over 80 units

of insulin/day

• Individualized algorithm for correction may be written instead

Page 31: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Scheduled Subcutaneous Insulin Orders

• Targets are specified• Frequency and timing of blood sugar checks are

to be specified• Point-of- care test results done within 30 minutes

are used to determine correction dose • Correction doses are given pre-meal only

– Aspart or lispro 5-15 minutes before the start of the meal

– Regular 30 minutes before the start of the meal

Page 32: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

American Diabetes Association (2003). Insulin therapy in the 21st century. Alexandria, VA: ADA.

The Goal of Insulin Therapy is Physiologic Replacement

Page 33: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Starting Insulin in the Newly Diagnosed Patient

• Calculate the total daily dose*Calculate the total daily dose*• Determine basal insulin requirementDetermine basal insulin requirement

– 40 to 50% of total daily dose40 to 50% of total daily dose

• Determine the mealtime insulin requirementDetermine the mealtime insulin requirement– 50 to 60% of total daily dose50 to 60% of total daily dose

• Determine the correction doseDetermine the correction dose– Based on estimate of insulin sensitivityBased on estimate of insulin sensitivity

* Total daily dose can be estimated based on iv requirements or weight

Page 34: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Transition From IV to SQ Insulin

IV insulin covers basal insulin requirements in the NPO patient

– Example: iv dose is 2 units/hour– Basal requirements: 2 u/h x 24 hrs= 48 units

• 48 u x 80% = 38 units basal sq insulin dose

– Food requirements equal basal requirements when eating: • 38/3 = 13 units with each meal

– Correction requirements are based on the “1700 rule”* • 1700 / total daily dose or 1700/76 = ~25 (1 u lowers glucose 25 mg/dl)

– Regimen: 13 u rapid acting insulin analog before meals 38 u insulin glargine at bedtime premeal correction: 1 u for every 25 mg/dl above target

* The “1700 rule” is simply an observation that estimates insulin sensitivity

Page 35: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Total Daily Dose Based on Weight

Patient Description Insulin (units/kg.day)

Trained athlete 0.5

Mod. active man 0.6

Sedentary man; 1st trimester of pregnancy

0.7

Mod. stressed man; 2nd trimester of pregnancy

0.8

Severely stressed man; 3rd trimester of pregnancy

0.9

Systemic bacterial infection; full term pregnancy

1.0

Severely ill man 1.5-2.0

Page 36: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Subcutaneous Insulin Dose Based on Weight

Example:– 70 kg man x 0.6 u/kg = 42 units total daily dose– Basal insulin = 42 x 50% = 21 units– Food insulin = 21/3 = 7 units with each meal– Correction insulin = 1700/42 =~40– Suggested insulin regimen:

• 7 units rapid acting insulin analog each meal• 21 units insulin glargine at bedtime

• Premeal correction insulin 1 unit for every 40 mg/dl above target

Page 37: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Remember…

• Aggressive glycemic control in hospitalized Aggressive glycemic control in hospitalized patients improves clinical outcomes.patients improves clinical outcomes.

• Management of diabetes in an inpatient setting Management of diabetes in an inpatient setting requires familiarity with the use of both iv and sc requires familiarity with the use of both iv and sc insulin, both in intensive care units and on insulin, both in intensive care units and on general nursing units.general nursing units.

• The time-honored traditions of “sliding scale” The time-honored traditions of “sliding scale” insulin, and of withholding insulin for procedures insulin, and of withholding insulin for procedures and euglycemia should be buried along with and euglycemia should be buried along with fractional urine testingfractional urine testing.

Page 38: Inpatient Hyperglycemia Management. Inpatient Hyperglycemia: General Points Avoid the temptation to ignore the patients diabetes Try to distinguish type.

Remember…

• Most hospitalized patients are dischargedMost hospitalized patients are discharged

• Inpatient diabetes treatment should Inpatient diabetes treatment should transition smoothly to outpatient transition smoothly to outpatient managementmanagement

• Think ahead; plan earlyThink ahead; plan early– ? Dietary consultation? Dietary consultation– ? Diabetes education consultation? Diabetes education consultation– ? Endocrinology consultation? Endocrinology consultation