Title: Building and Implementing Effective Subcutaneous Insulin Orders and Protocols
1Building and Implementing Effective Subcutaneous
Insulin Orders and Protocols
- Greg Maynard MD, MS
- Professor of Clinical Medicine and Chief,
Division of Hospital Medicine - University of California, San Diego
2Insulin Terminology
- Basal insulin
- Long-acting, all Type 1 and most Type 2 DM
patients should have basal insulin whether they
are eating or not (insulin glargine, insulin
detemir, or NPH) - Nutritional or pre-meal / prandial insulin
- Short-acting insulin given with meals in
anticipation of carbohydrate load glycemic spike
(scheduled insulin aspart, insulin lispro,
insulin glulisine, regular insulin) - Correction or supplemental insulin
- Short-acting insulin given to cover high glucose
if substantial use, it should drive adjustment of
basal and nutritional insulins
3Insulin Terminology
- Sliding scale insulin
- This is a dirty word we dont use dirty words at
UCSD - Mindless medicine, paralysis of thought,
action without benefit, insulin insanity - Evidence does not support this technique without
basal insulin unacceptably high rates of - Hyperglycemia
- Hypoglycemia and insulin stacking
- Iatrogenic DKA in patients with type 1 DM
Umpierrez G et al. J Hosp Med. 2006 1141-4.
4Steps for Successful Implementation
- Identify best practices and preferred regimens
- Integrate into a protocol, summarize in one page.
- Place protocol guidance into flow of work
- Structured order sets, documentation tools,
prompts - Use high reliability design, layer on other
improvement methods (including special teams) - Proactively identify and mitigate outliers.
Refine and redesign your educational efforts,
order set design, and implementation strategies
accordingly.
5Integrate Best Practice into protocols, order
sets, documentation
- Actionable glycemic target
- Constant carbohydrate / dietary / consult
- A1c
- Specify hyperglycemic diagnosis
- Education plan
- Hypoglycemia protocol
- Guidance for transitions (linked protocols)
6Integrate Best Practice into protocols, order
sets, documentation
- Coordinated insulin / nutrition / monitoring.
- Insulin preferred - DC oral agents
- Basal / Nutrition / Correction terminology
- Dosing adjustment guidance
- Specific regimens for different situations
- NPO
- Eating
- Tube feeds
- Steroids, etc
7Problems with Oral Agents in the Hospital
- Sulfonylureas (e.g., glyburide, glipizide, etc.)
- Hypoglycemia (long acting)
- ? CAD
- Metformin
- Lactic acidosis risk
- Renal insufficiency, hypotension, heart failure)
- Gastrointestinal
- Nausea, abdominal pain, diarrhea
- Thiazolidinediones (TZDs or glitazones) (e.g.,
rosiglitazone) - Possible liver toxicity
- Fluid overload, heart failure
- Inability to titrate (very slow onset of action)
8Physiologic Insulin SecretionBasal-Bolus
Concept
Nutritional (prandial) insulin
50
Insulin (µU/mL)
Suppresses glucose production
between meals and overnight
25
0
Basal insulin
Breakfast Lunch Supper
150
Nutritional glucose
The 50/50 rule (or maybe 40/60)
100
Glucose (mg/dL)
50
Basal glucose
0
7
8
9
10
11
12
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
A.M.
P.M.
Time of Day
9Which Patients Need Basal Insulin in the Hospital?
- Insulin-deficient patients should always have
basal insulin (even NPO) - Type 1 DM or DKA, pancreatic insufficiency
- A history of type 2 DM for 10 years or more
- On any insulin for 5 years or more
- Wide fluctuations of glucose values
- Preprandial glucose gt ?130, 150 mg/dL
- Any glucose gt 180 mg/dL
10Constructing a Profile for Scheduled Subcutaneous
Insulin .
Glulisine Lispro Aspart
Regular
NPH
Glargine Detemir
6 am 12 pm 6 pm 12 am
11SHM Glycemic Control Task ForcePreferred Insulin
Regimens
- See handout
- In interest of standardization, narrow down
choices. - Eliminating other acceptable choices, but also
many unacceptable ones! - Allow variation, while encouraging standardization
12Common Features Increasing Risk of Hypoglycemia
in an Inpatient Setting
- Malnutrition and low body weight
- Chronic renal failure
- Decreased oral intake, failure to provide
nutrition or dextrose infusion - Advanced age
- Liver disease
- Beta-blockers
- Iatrogenic Risk Factors SSI, distractions, poor
regimens disconnect between testing,
administration of insulin, and nutrition
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15Calculating Insulin Dosage (Total Daily Dose)
- Calculate from insulin infusion amount
- Recent steady state hourly rate x 20, for example
- Add up insulins taken at home, adjust for
glycemic control and other factors - Calculate from weight, body habitus, other factors
16Starting Basal-Bolus from Scratch
- Calculate starting total daily dose (TDD)
- 0.3 units/kg/day (hypoglycemia risk factors,
naïve patient) - 0.4 units/kg/day (conservative for most
patients) - 0.5 0.6 units/kg/day (overweight to obese)
- Adjust TDD up or down based on
- Past response to insulin
- Presence of hyperglycemia inducing agents, stress
- This Is very conservative and safe (adjust up as
needed) - Basal insulin 40-50 of TDD
- Glargine q HS or q AM, detemir in 1 or 2 doses
- Goal FBS and pre-meal glucose 80-110 mg/dL
17Case 1 Initiating Subcutaneous Insulin in an
obese patient eating regular meals
- 56 year old man admitted with diabetic foot
infection, eating regular meals. - Obese, weighs 100 kg
- Home regimen
- 2 OHGs and 20 units of NPH q HS
- Baseline Control
- HbA1c of 10, POC glucose in ED 240 mg/dL
- What are your initial orders for insulin?
- What change would you make if he had to go to the
OR the next morning?
18Eating Patient (or Bolus TF)
19Case 1 Solutions for Obese, eating patient
- Accuchecks AC and HS
- TDD 100 kg x 0.6 units/kg/day 60 units
- Glargine (Lantus) Alternative
- Basal Glargine 30 units q HS
- Nutritional Lispro 10 units q ac
- Correction Lispro per scale q ac and HS
- For NPO p MN and OR the next AM
- Hold nutritional dose, continue adjustment dose
- Give the full dose of Glargine q HS No change.
20Adjust, Adjust, Adjust
- If glucoses going lt 70 mg / dL, use 80 of TDD as
next days TDD - If glucose readings gt 150 and no hypoglycemic
values, use 120 of yesterdays total as new TDD
(or 130, depending on the uniformity and degree
of poor control)
21Case 2 Patient in IMU on Continuous TF
- 65 year old you are seeing for the first time in
the IMU, no outpatient history available except
on insulin. Glucose gt 200 in ED, HbA1C pending.
- 80 kg overweight woman started on continuous TF
yesterday (HD3), with serum glucose in 200-250
mg/dL range - What would you order?
22TPN or Continuous Tube Feedings
23Continuous Tube Feeding Insulin Regimen
24Case 2 Solutions in a patient on continuous TF
or TPN
- Accuchecks q 6 hours
- TDD is 0.5 units/kg/day x 80 kg 40 units
- Basal Glargine 16 units q hs (or q am)
- Nutritional 6 units regular insulin q 6 h
- Correction regular insulin q 6 h per scale
- Patients being started on TPN do better with
separate insulin infusions initially (with y
connector) to find dose. - Conversion then can be made to insulin in TPN
(80 of TDD), or subcutaneous regimen.
25Case 3 Transition from IV to subcutaneous
insulin
- 60 yo man with DM 2, well controlled in ICU on
insulin infusion and continuous TF at 40 ml/hour. - Insulin Infusion rate 80 units in the last 24
hours, 3 units / hour over last 6 hours. - Prior to hospitalization, baseline HbA1c was 8.7
on 40 units of 70/30 insulin per day and OHGs. - Plan Transfer to ward, continue enteral
nutrition - How do you transition this patient to a
subcutaneous insulin regimen?
26Stepwise approach to moving from IV to SC insulin
- Calculate how much IV insulin the patient has
been requiring. Modify down for safety cushion. - Was this insulin supplying Basal requirements, or
Basal and Nutritional requirements? Translate
into the subcutaneous regimen. - Consider any nutritional changes that may be
implemented at the time of the transition off of
the drip - Make sure SC insulin is given before
discontinuation of the IV insulin
27Case Transition to subcutaneous insulin(enteral
nutrition to continue)
- Safe Estimate of 24 hour requirement
- 3 units / hour x 20 60 units
- 60 units represents the TDD Basal and
nutritional insulin - 5050 Rule Example
- Glargine 30 units Basal
- Regular 7 units q 6 h Nutritional
- Correction dose of regular insulin also given
along with nutritional dose as needed. - Glargine / Nutritional should be given BEFORE IV
insulin stopped
28What if??? Enteral to PO
- Instead of continuing enteral nutrition on the
floor, you opt to stop enteral nutrition and
start patient on a mechanical soft diet? - Glargine 30 units Basal
- RAA 10 units q AC Nutritional / Prandial
- (IF you expect them to eat a full meal! )
- If po intake suspect at first, use CHO counting,
or empirically reduce nutritional RAA dose and
give the dose just AFTER the meal instead of just
BEFORE the meal. - CORRECTION dose RAA insulin also needed.
29Have a Discharge PlanTailored to Patient!
- Diabetes and insulin education, survival skills
START EARLY and repeat - Follow up and community resources
- Covered by insurance
- Patient and family can understand
- Reconcile medications
- Language, health literacy, and cultural barriers
- Use HbA1c
- Insulin requirement may decrease post discharge