Title: How Will You Know Youre
1- How Will You Know Youre
- Making a Difference?
- Collecting Data and Devising Metrics
-
- Jeffrey L. Schnipper, MD, MPH
- Director of Clinical Research
- BWH Hospitalist Service
- Brigham and Womens Hospital
2Overview
- Data Collection
- Measuring quality of glucose control
glucometrics - Measuring safety hypoglycemia and extreme
hyperglycemia - Measuring processes of care insulin ordering,
etc. - Discussion
3Data Collection
- Ideal
- Automated download of glucose meter data into
central database - Link to hospital database with patient, unit, and
service information - Automatically generated, customizable reports
- Statistician available when needed
4Data Collection
- Reality
- No stream of data
- Dont wait, start sampling!
- No link to hospital data
- Create link vs. use all available data
- No reports
- Start with simple analyses (first pass)
- Use Yales glucometrics web site
- No statistician
- Borrow one vs. do without
5Glucometrics
- Definition
- General Considerations
- What is most clinically relevant?
- What is most sensitive to change?
- What is most likely to be changed by your
intervention(s)? - What is least biased?
- What has most statistical power?
6Glucometrics I Which Patients?
- Who to include? Options
- All patients with discharge dx of DM
- All patients with certain of POC values
- All patients treated with insulin
- All patients with inpatient hyperglycemia
- Who to exclude
- DKA, HHS, Pregnancy
- Patients with fewer than 4-8 readings
- Who to stratify
- ICU vs. Ward
7Glucometrics I Which Patients?
- Non Critical Care Units
- First pass
- All patients with POC glucose testing
- Exclude DKA, HHS, pregnancy if possible
- Second pass
- All patients with billing codes for diabetes
(250.xx) or inpatient hyperglycemia (e.g., 2 or
more glucose readings gt 180 mg/dL) - Sensitivity analysis exclude patients with fewer
than 5 evaluable readings
8Glucometrics I Which Patients?
- Critical Care Units
- First pass
- All patients in each critical care unit
- Second pass
- Patients with DKA, HHS or pregnancy in separate
analyses - All patients with fasting glucose gt 126 mg/dL x2
or random glucose gt 140 mg/dL x2
9Glucometrics II Which Readings?
- Which to include? Options
- All values
- Day of procedure (or ICU admission) and next 2
days - First 10-14 days of ward admission
- 4 standard POC readings on ward
- Which to exclude? Options
- First hospital day?
- Hypoglycemic values when calculating mean?
- Readings within 1 hour of previous reading?
10Glucometrics II Which Readings?
- Non Critical Care Units
- First pass all POC readings
- Second pass
- Sensitivity analysis exclude readings on
hospital day 1 and hospital days beyond day 10 - Sensitivity analysis exclude readings taken
within 1 hour of a previous reading
11Glucometrics II Which Readings?
- Critical Care Units
- All POC and other glucose values used to guide
care
12Glucometrics III Glucose Control
- What unit of analysis?
- Glucose reading
- Pros easy to calculate, most statistical power
- Cons least clinically relevant, skewed data
- Patient Stay
- Pros most clinically relevant
- Cons skewed data by LOS, uneven testing
- Patient-Day
- Pros least biased, good balance of other two
- Cons difficult to calculate and interpret
13Glucometrics III Glucose Control
- What measures of control?
- Rates of hyper- or hypo-glycemia
- Percent readings within range
- Mean glucose value (/- exclusion of low values)
- Percent of mean values within range
- Rates of being in control (all values within
range) - Pros and Cons for each
- Best approach is to choose a few
14Glucometrics III Glucose Control
- Special Measures
- Patient-Day Weighted Mean
- Three-Day Blood Glucose Average (3BG)
- Hyperglycemic Index
- Measures by hospital day (HD)
15Glucometrics III Glucose Control
- Establishing definitions
- Hypoglycemia and extreme hypoglycemia
- Hyperglycemia and extreme hyperglycemia
- Ideal glucose range
- Depends on
- Critical Care vs. Not
- Mean vs. All Values
- What will gain consensus at your site
- Consider tightening definitions over time
16Glucometrics III Glucose Control
- Non Critical Care Units
- First Pass
- Percent patient-days with mean glucose 80-140
mg/dL - Percent patient-days with all values 70-180 mg/dL
- Percent patient stays with mean glucose 80-140
mg/dL
17Glucometrics III Glucose Control
- Second pass all first-pass analyses plus
- Patient-Day weighted mean glucose
- Mean percent glucose readings per patient that
are 70-180 mg/dL - Percent patients with mean glucose 80-140 mg/dL
by Hospital Day (days 1-7)
18Glucometrics III Glucose Control
- Critical Care Units
- First pass
- Percent glucose readings lt110 mg/dL, lt140 mg/dL
- Percent patient-days with mean glucose lt 110
mg/dL, lt 140 mg/dL - Percent patient-days with all values lt 110 mg/dL,
lt 140 mg/dL
19Glucometrics III Glucose Control
- Critical Care Units
- First pass
- 3-day blood glucose average (3BG) for selected
periop patients - Percent patients with 3BG lt 110, lt 140 mg/dL
- Mean time to reach glycemic target on insulin
infusion
20Glucometrics III Glucose Control
- Critical Care Units
- Second pass
- 3BG as above for all patients in critical care
- Hyperglycemic index for all patients in critical
care (AUC of glucose values above target)
21Patient Safety
- Patient-day best measure
- Same for critical care and non critical care
- Percent patient-days with any value
- lt 40 mg/dL (extreme hypoglycemia)
- lt 70 mg/dL (hypoglycemia)
- gt 300 mg/dL (extreme hyperglycemia)
22Processes of Care Insulin Ordering
- More sensitive to change than outcomes
- Failure to change process ? change the
intervention - Selective non-adherence with process
- Improve implementation
- Change protocol
- Accept certain degree to non-adherence
23Processes of Care Insulin Ordering
- Non Critical Care Units
- First pass
- Among all patients on insulin, percent on basal
- Second pass
- Among patients with hyperglycemia (e.g., 2
readings gt 180 mg/dL), percent on basal - Among patients with hyperglycemia and eating,
percent on basal and nutritional - Percent patient days when changes made to insulin
regimen if hypo- or hyperglycemia the day before
24Processes of Care Insulin Ordering
- Critical Care Units
- First pass
- Percent of patients with 2 or more glucose
readings gt 140 mg/dL on insulin infusion protocol
25Processes of Care Other Measures
- Glucose measured within 8 hours of admission
- Hgb A1c measured if not available within 30 days
of admission - POC glucose testing for all patients with
hyperglycemia or diabetes - Measures of adherence to protocol components
- Use of sliding scale insulin alone
- Use of diabetes order sets
- Use of oral diabetic agents (esp. if
contraindicated) - Coordination of POC glucose testing, insulin
administration, and food delivery - Patient, physician, and nurse attitudes,
education, and satisfaction
26Analyses
- RCT
- Pros easy to interpret and publish results
- Cons doesnt account for CQI methods
- Before-After analysis
- Pros easy to interpret results, may be
publishable - Cons doesnt account for CQI methods, difficulty
adjusting for temporal trends and cointerventions - Run charts
- Pros best for CQI
- Cons statistics harder to interpret
- Run charts with SPC
- Best of both worlds when using CQI
27Algorithm
Baseline
Order set
1st order set
28Discussion
- Experiences at your institutions
- Questions
- Concerns
- Comments
- Thank you!