| Literature DB >> 20550725 |
Marcus J Schultz1, Robin E Harmsen, Peter E Spronk.
Abstract
Glycemic control aiming at normoglycemia, frequently referred to as 'strict glycemic control' (SGC), decreased mortality and morbidity of adult critically ill patients in two randomized controlled trials (RCTs). Five successive RCTs, however, failed to show benefit of SGC with one trial even reporting an unexpected higher mortality. Consequently, enthusiasm for the implementation of SGC has declined, hampering translation of SGC into daily ICU practice. In this manuscript we attempt to explain the variances in outcomes of the RCTs of SGC, and point out other limitations of the current literature on glycemic control in ICU patients. There are several alternative explanations for why the five negative RCTs showed no beneficial effects of SGC, apart from the possibility that SGC may indeed not benefit ICU patients. These include, but are not restricted to, variability in the performance of SGC, differences among trial designs, changes in standard of care, differences in timing (that is, initiation) of SGC, and the convergence between the intervention groups and control groups with respect to achieved blood glucose levels in the successive RCTs. Additional factors that may hamper translation of SGC into daily ICU practice include the feared risk of severe hypoglycemia, additional labor associated with SGC, and uncertainties about who the primarily responsible caregiver should be for the implementation of SGC.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20550725 PMCID: PMC2911685 DOI: 10.1186/cc8966
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Randomized controlled trials on strict glycemic control (target blood glucose levels of 80 to 110 mg/dl)
| Main results of the trial | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reference | Year | What was compared? | Study population | Mortality | Severe hypoglycemia | Do results support the use of SGC? |
| van den Berghe | 2001 | SGC versus standard therapy (target blood glucose level of 180 to 200 mg/dl if exceeded 215 mg/dl) | 1,548 surgical critically ill patients | SGC decreased mortality (4.6 versus 8.0%) | SGC raised the incidence of severe hypoglycemia (5.1 versus 0.8%) | Yes |
| van den Berghe | 2006 | SGC versus standard therapy (target blood glucose level of 180 to 200 mg/dl if exceeded 215 mg/dl) | 1,200 medical critically ill patients | SGC decreased mortality of patients who stayed in ICU ≥3 days (43.0 versus 52.2%) | SGC raised the incidence of severe hypoglycemia (18.7 versus 3.1%) | Yes |
| Arabi | 2008 | SGC versus standard therapy (target blood glucose level of 180 to 200 mg/dl) | 523 mixed medical-surgical critically ill patients | SGC did not affect ICU mortality (13.5% versus 17.1%) | SGC raised the incidence of severe hypoglycemia (28.6 versus 3.1%) | No |
| De la Rosa | 2008 | SGC versus standard therapy (target blood glucose level of 180 to 200 mg/dl) | 504 mixed medical-surgical critically ill patients | SGC did not affect 28-day mortality (36.6% versus 32.4%) | SGC raised the incidence of severe hypoglycemia (8.5 versus 1.7%) | No |
| Brunkhorst | 2008 | SGC versus standard therapy (target blood glucose level of 180 mg/dl if exceeded 200 mg/dl) | 488 mixed medical-surgical critically ill patients | SGC did not affect 28-day mortality (24.7 versus 26.0%); SGC did not affect 90-day mortality (39.7 versus 35.4%) | SGC raised the incidence of severe hypoglycemia (17.0 versus 4.1%) | No |
| Finfer | 2009 | SGC (target blood glucose level of 81 to 108 mg/dl) versus standard therapy (target blood glucose level of <180 mg/dl) | 6,104 mixed medical-surgical critically ill patients | SGC did not affect 28-day mortality (22.3 versus 20.8%); SGC increased 90-day mortality (27.5 versus 24.9%) | SGC raised the incidence of severe hypoglycemia (6.8 versus 0.5%) | No |
| Preiser | 2009 | SGC (target blood glucose level of 80 to 110 mg/dl) versus standard therapy (140 to 180 mg/dl) | 1,101 mixed medical-surgical critically ill patients | SGC did not affect 28-day survival (17.2 versus 15.3%) | SGC raised the incidence of severe hypoglycemia (8.7 versus 2.7%) | No |
Figure 1Methodological aspects of strict glycemic control, which may contain potential sources of variability in the performance of this strategy. Items are categorized into the following subjects: 'monitoring', 'insulin delivery', 'algorithm', and 'experience'. Items are also roughly positioned on a line from 'easy', 'simple', 'distinct' and/or 'clear' to implement towards 'obscure', 'indistinct', 'complex' and/or 'difficult' to translate from one center to another. Specific elements per item indicated with an asterisk are as performed in the single-center RCTs from Leuven. SGC, strict glycemic control.
Figure 2Blood glucose levels (mean or median in the control or conventional group (closed bars) and strict glycemic control group (open bars) of seven randomized controlled trials. Original single-center randomized controlled trials (RCTs) from Leuven [1,2]; single-center RCTs [3,4]; multi-center RCTs [5-7]. Dotted lines indicate the blood glucose levels in the two original single-center RCTs from Leuven.