Literature DB >> 25044666

Point-of-care blood glucose measurement errors overestimate hypoglycaemia rates in critically ill patients.

Jean-Jacques Nya-Ngatchou1, Dawn Corl, Susan Onstad, Tom Yin, Tracy Tylee, Louise Suhr, Rachel E Thompson, Brent E Wisse.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hypoglycaemia is associated with morbidity and mortality in critically ill patients, and many hospitals have programmes to minimize hypoglycaemia rates. Recent studies have established the hypoglycaemic patient-day as a key metric and have published benchmark inpatient hypoglycaemia rates on the basis of point-of-care blood glucose data even though these values are prone to measurement errors.
METHODS: A retrospective, cohort study including all patients admitted to Harborview Medical Center Intensive Care Units (ICUs) during 2010 and 2011 was conducted to evaluate a quality improvement programme to reduce inappropriate documentation of point-of-care blood glucose measurement errors. Laboratory Medicine point-of-care blood glucose data and patient charts were reviewed to evaluate all episodes of hypoglycaemia.
RESULTS: A quality improvement intervention decreased measurement errors from 31% of hypoglycaemic (<70 mg/dL) patient-days in 2010 to 14% in 2011 (p < 0.001) and decreased the observed hypoglycaemia rate from 4.3% of ICU patient-days to 3.4% (p < 0.001). Hypoglycaemic events were frequently recurrent or prolonged (~40%), and these events are not identified by the hypoglycaemic patient-day metric, which also may be confounded by a large number of very low risk or minimally monitored patient-days.
CONCLUSIONS: Documentation of point-of-care blood glucose measurement errors likely overestimates ICU hypoglycaemia rates and can be reduced by a quality improvement effort. The currently used hypoglycaemic patient-day metric does not evaluate recurrent or prolonged events that may be more likely to cause patient harm. The monitored patient-day as currently defined may not be the optimal denominator to determine inpatient hypoglycaemic risk.
Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  critical illness; diabetes; glycaemic control; insulin; quality improvement

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25044666     DOI: 10.1002/dmrr.2575

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Diabetes Metab Res Rev        ISSN: 1520-7552            Impact factor:   4.876


  2 in total

1.  What Can We Learn From Point-of-Care Blood Glucose Values Deleted and Repeated by Nurses?

Authors:  Dawn Corl; Tom Yin; May Ulibarri; Heather Lien; Tracy Tylee; Jing Chao; Brent E Wisse
Journal:  J Diabetes Sci Technol       Date:  2018-03-24

2.  Validity of bedside blood glucose measurement in critically ill patients with intensive insulin therapy.

Authors:  Ata Mahmoodpoor; Hadi Hamishehkar; Kamran Shadvar; Sarvin Sanaie; Afshin Iranpour; Vahid Fattahi
Journal:  Indian J Crit Care Med       Date:  2016-11
  2 in total

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