| Literature DB >> 29343294 |
M Navaratnarajah1, R Rea2, R Evans2, F Gibson2, C Antoniades2, A Keiralla2, M Demosthenous2, G Kassimis2, G Krasopoulos2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: No uniform consensus in the UK or Europe exists, for glycaemic management of patients with Diabetes or pre-diabetes undergoing cardiac surgery.Entities:
Keywords: CABG; Cardiac surgery; Diabetes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29343294 PMCID: PMC5773148 DOI: 10.1186/s13019-018-0700-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiothorac Surg ISSN: 1749-8090 Impact factor: 1.637
Impact of newly discovered hyperglycaemia on the outcome of patients admitted to hospital
| Aim of Study | Results | |
|---|---|---|
| Umpierrez et al.22 | To determine the prevalence of in-hospital hyperglycemia and determine the survival of patients with hyperglycemia with and without a history of Diabetes | Newly discovered hyperglycemia was associated with a higher in-hospital mortality rate compared with those patients with a prior history of Diabetes and patients with normoglycemia. |
| Abdelmalak et al.23 | To study the hypothesis that pre-operative BG levels and the Diabetes diagnosis status of the patients are related to surgical outcomes | One year mortality was significantly related to pre-operative BG. Hyperglycaemic patients with diagnosed Diabetes displayed a significantly lower 1 yr. mortality than hyperglycaemic patients without Diabetes |
| Noordzij et al.24 | To determine the relationship between pre-operative BG levels and peri-operative mortality in non-cardiac and non-vascular surgery | Pre-operative hyperglycemia was found to be associated with increased cardiovascular mortality in patients undergoing non-cardiac and non-vascular surgery |
| Whitcomb et al.25 | To assess the association between hyperglycemia and in-hospital mortality in different ITU departments | Higher mortality was seen in hyperglycemic patients without history of Diabetes in the cardiothoracic and neurosurgical units |
| Anderson et al.29 | To determine whether pre-operative fasting BG is associated with an increased mortality after CABG. | Patients not known to have Diabetes but with an elevated pre-operative fasting BG had a 30 day and a 1-year mortality twice that of patients with normal values, and equivalent to patients known to have Diabetes |
Summary of the US STS guidelines for glycaemic control during adult cardiac surgery (2008)
| A] active control of BGs < 180 mg/dl[10 mmol/l] for all patients during the intra- and post-operative period |
| B] all patients with Diabetes receive an insulin infusion in the operating room and for at least 24 h postoperatively |
| C] pre-operative HbA1c measurement in all patients with Diabetes and those at high risk of post-operative hyperglycaemia, to optimise glycaemic management, and identify patients requiring more aggressive glycaemic control |
| D] pre-discharge in-patient education of all patients with Diabetes and |
| E] appropriate follow up and communication with primary care physician |
Potential Steps for Facilitating Service Improvement in Diabetic / Pre-diabetic Patients Undergoing Cardiac Surgery
| Step 1 |
| Publication of detailed and specific guidelines regarding: |
| Pre-operative target glycaemic criteria permitting elective surgery e.g. HbA1c < 7.5% |
| Methods, triggers and duration of intra-operative and post-operative glycaemic control |
| Post-operative / pre-discharge target criteria of glycaemic control on ITU and ward e.g. blood glucose ≤12 mM pre-discharge |
| Early post-discharge follow up by family doctor / Diabetes specialist team to ensure ongoing good glycaemic control |
| Step 2 |
| Establishment of a dedicated cardiac diabetic specialist team in every cardiac surgical unit to facilitate: |
| Patient and professional education at all levels and communication with primary and community care services |
| Step 3 |
| Establishment of specific national diabetic cardiac Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP) Europe-wide to include: |
| HbA1c measurement in 100% of elective patients undergoing cardiac surgery |
| Pre-operative point of care fasting blood glucose of ≤8 mM in 95% of operated patients |
| Pre-operative HbA1c value of < 7.5% in 95% of elective patients going for cardiac surgery |
| Median post-operative LOS of diabetic patients ≤1.0 day greater than median postoperative LOS for non-diabetic patients |
| Pre-discharge blood glucose range of 4–12 mM (day before discharge) in 95% of all patients going for cardiac surgery |
| Post-discharge review by diabetic specialist nurse or family doctor within 1 week in 95% of patients |
| Incidence of deep sternal wound infection for diabetic patient within the 95% CI of non-diabetic patient |
Oxford Heart Centre Diabetes Care Pathway
| • Routine pre-operative diabetic screening for |
| • Routine diabetic screening for |
| • Point of care diabetic specialist team review of |
| • Automatic / mandatory ITU, ward, point of ITU discharge and pre-hospital discharge diabetic specialist team review of all diabetic, |
| • Automatic / mandatory GP or specialist nurse post-discharge follow up arrangement on agreed day e.g. day 4 |
| • Routine pre-operative blood glucose measurement on admission of |
| • Establishment of a glycaemic control working group responsible for regular monitoring, auditing and presenting glycaemic control performance data |
| • New standardised Intravenous Insulin protocol for all patients undergoing cardiac surgery and guidelines for management of hyper and hypo-glycaemia |
The summary of the main findings of this review
| • The proportion of people worldwide with Diabetes undergoing isolated CABG surgery has increased by 33% in recent years to 25–40% |
| • The incidence of diagnosed Diabetes continues to rise, and high levels of undiagnosed Diabetes and pre-diabetes are reported in surgical patients. |
| • Pre- and peri-operative hyperglycaemia is associated with worse outcomes following cardiac surgery |
| • Evidence suggests that pre-operative hyperglycaemia in patients without Diabetes carries greater clinical significance; than in patients already with diagnosed Diabetes. |
| • Cardiac surgical patients without Diabetes with pre-operative hyperglycaemia have a 1 year mortality double that of patients with normoglyacemia, and equivalent to patients already diagnosed with Diabetes. |
| • No uniform consensus in the UK or Europe exists, for glycaemic management of patients with Diabetes or pre-diabetes undergoing cardiac surgery. |
| • Patients with well controlled Diabetes |
| • This review supports the pre-operative screening, and optimisation of glycaemic control in patients undergoing cardiac surgery. |
| • The optimal glycaemic management of cardiac surgical patients remains unclear and requires definition |
| • Clear guidelines relating to the glycaemic management of cardiac surgical patients are needed in the UK and Europe |