Title: Perioperative Management of Diabetes Mellitus
1Peri-operative Management of Diabetes Mellitus
- Christian Sinclair
- AIM Presentation
- December 18, 2002
2Overview
- Pre-operative Evaluation
- Hospital Barriers to Glucose Control
- Common Errors in Glucose Management
- Glycemic Control
- Intervention Trials
- Hospital Utilization
- Recommendations
- References
3Preoperative Evaluation
- DM is a major risk factor
- Silent ischemia, CAD
- Evaluate for end organ dysfunction
- Nephropathy, Autonomic Neuropathy
- CAD, PVD
- Baseline Glycemic Control
- Current Therapies Utilized
- Type of Surgery
- Type of Anesthesia
4Hospital Barriers
- Diabetes becomes secondary
- Infection
- Fever
- Glucocorticoids
- Surgery/Trauma
- Medical Stress
- Decreased physical activity
- Change in diet and drugs
- Patient has loss of control
5Common Errors
- Admission Orders
- Overly High Glycemic Targets
- Lack of Therapeutic Adjustment
- Overutilization of Sliding Scales
- Underutilization of Insulin Infusions
6Benefits of Glycemic Control
Reduced infection risk
Improved nutrient delivery
Improved immunoglobulin complement fixation
Improved leukocyte function
Less intravascular volume changes
Normalization of coagulation
Increased blood flow to wounds
Improved response of endothelium-dependent
vasodilation
Less electrolyte shifts
Improved oxygen delivery
Improved wound healing
Normalize GFR
Increased growth factor production
Elevated free fatty acids and cardiotoxicity
Less thrombotic complications
Normal skin fibroblast proliferation
7Interventional Trials
- DIGAMI
- Diabetes Insulin-Glucose Infusion in Acute MI
- 620 pts. with MI
- Randomized to
- Standard diabetic care
- Standard diabetic care and insulin-glucose IV for
gt24 hrs. (Goal 126-196 mg/dl) - ALSO recd 3 mos. of multi-dose insulin
8DIGAMI up to discharge
- Mean FSBG at 24 hours
- Control
- 211
- Standard plus insulin-glucose infusion
- 173
- Mean FSBG at discharge
- Control
- 162
- Standard plus insulin-glucose infusion
- 148
9DIGAMI 3.4 years of follow-up
- Deaths
- Control
- 138
- Standard plus insulin-glucose infusion
- 102 (ARR 28, P0.01) NNT 100/28 3.6
10N Engl J Med 11/8/01
- Van den Berghr et al.
- Belgium
- RCT of ventilated, ICU pts
- Randomized to
- Intensive insulin therapy (80-110 mg/dl)
- Conventional insulin (180-200 mg/dl)
11N Engl J Med 11/8/01
- Reason for admission
- 63 - Cardiac surgery (mostly CABG)
- 37 - Other surgery
- Prior diabetes
- Only 13 of patients (5 recd insulin)
12N Engl J Med 11/8/01
- Intensive Therapeutic Group
- Insulin infusion started if FSBG was greater than
110 - Goal of 80-110 in the ICU
- Checked Q4
- Goal of 180-200 after transfer out of unit
13N Engl J Med 11/8/01
- Conventional Therapeutic Group
- Insulin infusion started if
- FSBG was greater than 215
- Goal of 180-200 in the ICU
- Checked Q4
- Goal of 180-200 after transfer out of unit
- In both groups, IV glucose was started and
advanced to parenteral or enteral feeding ASAP
14N Engl J Med 11/8/01
- Study was designed to study 2500 patients to
detect a mortality difference - STOPPED EARLY!!
15N Engl J Med 11/8/01
P value
Intensive
Conventional
Â
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Mortality
lt0.04
4.6
8.0
Death during intensive care
lt0.005
10.6
20.2
Death among ICU gt 5 days
In-hospital death
0.01
7.2
10.9
All patients
0.01
16.8
26.3
ICU gt 5 days
16N Engl J Med 11/8/01
P value
Intensive
Conventional
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Morbidity
0.01
11.4
15.7
Pts requiring gt14 d ICU
0.003
7.5
11.9
Pts requiring gt14 d Vent
0.04
9.0
12.3
Peak Creat gt 22.5
0.02
7.7
11.2
Peak PUN gt 54
0.007
4.8
8.2
HD or CVVHD
0.04
22.4
26.7
Peak Bilirubin gt 2
0.003
4.2
7.8
Septicemia
lt0.001
28.7
51.9
EMG ICU polyneuropathy
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17Recommendations
- Individualize Therapy
- Development of hospital specific algorithims or
protocols? - Multi-disciplinary (MD, RN, dietician)
- Pain is the fifth vital sign..should blood
glucose be the 6th
18Recommendations
- Diet
- ADA 1800, 2000 kcal
- Chance for education..
- Other comorbidities
- Obesity, hyperlipidemia, hypertension
19Recommendations
- Glucose Monitoring
- QAC QHS initially
- May decrease to BID if stable
- Chance for education..
20Recommendations
- Glucose Control
- Goal of 120-200
- Pre-op
- Early peri-op
- Late post-op
- Sliding scale
- Special considerations
21Preoperative phase
- Schedule surgery as early as possible to avoid
interfering with regimen - Education about hypo/hyperglycemic episodes
(warning signs) - Monitored every 1-2 hours before during and after
surgery
22Preoperative phase
- Type 2 DM (diet controlled)
- No therapy needed perioperatively, may use
regular/lispro SQ sliding scale PRN for FSBG gt200 - Type 2 DM (diet and oral tx)
- Hold DM meds after MN (including metformin)
- May use regular/lispro SSI PRN gt 200
23Preoperative phase
- Type 1/2 DM (with insulin)
- May continue SQ insulin for short simple
procedures - Switch from long acting (ultralente or lantus) to
intermediate acting (NPH) 1-2 days prior to
surgery (reduce hypogly) - Reduce intermediate nighttime dose
24Preoperative phase
- Type 1/2 DM (with insulin)
- Short, early procedures
- Delay AM insulin until after surgery and before
eating - Missed breakfast
- ½ -2/3 of AM NPH dose
- Missed breakfast and lunch
- 1/3 - ½ of AM NPH dose, 1/3 of regular
- Pumps continue basal rate
25Preoperative phase
- Type 1/2 DM (with insulin)
- Late procedures
- 1/3-½ of usual intermediate insulin and D5W 100
cc/hr - Pumps continue basal rate
- Short acting sliding scale
- Long procedures (CABG, Xplant, etc.)
- Insulin infusion with glucose
26Late postoperative phase
- Hold metformin (CRI, hepatic insuff, CHF)
- Sulfonylureas stimulate insulin secretion and
cause hypoglycemia - Make sure eating has been established
- Subcutaneous insulin should be continued with D5
supplement
27Special Considerations
- Glucocorticoid Therapy
- Mech of Hyperglycemia is multifactorial
- Incr. hepatic gluconeogenesis
- Inhibit glucose uptake in adipose
- Alteration of receptor and post-receptor fxn
- Leads to ketoacidosis
- High postprandial hyperglycemia
- Minimal elevation of fasting glucose
- May need to add or increase insulin
28References
- Jacober, SJ, Sowers, JR. An update on
perioperative management of diabetes. Arch Intern
Med 1999 1592405. - Malmberg K. Prospective randomized study of
intensive insulin treatment on long term survival
after acute myocardial infarction in patients
with diabetes mellitus. BMJ. 19973141512-1515. - Metchick L. Inpatient Management of Diabetes
Mellitus. Am J Med 2002 113317-323.