| Literature DB >> 29508275 |
Bahendeka Silver1, Kaushik Ramaiya2, Swai Babu Andrew3, Otieno Fredrick4, Sarita Bajaj5, Sanjay Kalra6, Bavuma M Charlotte7, Karigire Claudine8, Anthony Makhoba9.
Abstract
A diagnosis of diabetes or hyperglycemia should be confirmed prior to ordering, dispensing, or administering insulin (A). Insulin is the primary treatment in all patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) (A). Typically, patients with T1DM will require initiation with multiple daily injections at the time of diagnosis. This is usually short-acting insulin or rapid-acting insulin analogue given 0 to 15 min before meals together with one or more daily separate injections of intermediate or long-acting insulin. Two or three premixed insulin injections per day may be used (A). The target glycated hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) for all children with T1DM, including preschool children, is recommended to be < 7.5% (< 58 mmol/mol). The target is chosen aiming at minimizing hyperglycemia, severe hypoglycemia, hypoglycemic unawareness, and reducing the likelihood of development of long-term complications (B). For patients prone to glycemic variability, glycemic control is best evaluated by a combination of results with self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) (B). Indications for exogenous insulin therapy in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) include acute illness or surgery, pregnancy, glucose toxicity, contraindications to or failure to achieve goals with oral antidiabetic medications, and a need for flexible therapy (B). In T2DM patients, with regards to achieving glycemic goals, insulin is considered alone or in combination with oral agents when HbA1c is ≥ 7.5% (≥ 58 mmol/mol); and is essential for treatment in those with HbA1c ≥ 10% (≥ 86 mmol/mol), when diet, physical activity, and other antihyperglycemic agents have been optimally used (B). The preferred method of insulin initiation in T2DM is to begin by adding a long-acting (basal) insulin or once-daily premixed/co-formulation insulin or twice-daily premixed insulin, alone or in combination with glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA) or in combination with other oral antidiabetic drugs (OADs) (B). If the desired glucose targets are not met, rapid-acting or short-acting (bolus or prandial) insulin can be added at mealtime to control the expected postprandial raise in glucose. An insulin regimen should be adopted and individualized but should, to the extent possible, closely resemble a natural physiologic state and avoid, to the extent possible, wide fluctuating glucose levels (C). Blood glucose monitoring is an integral part of effective insulin therapy and should not be omitted in the patient's care plan. Fasting plasma glucose (FPG) values should be used to titrate basal insulin, whereas both FPG and postprandial glucose (PPG) values should be used to titrate mealtime insulin (B). Metformin combined with insulin is associated with decreased weight gain, lower insulin dose, and less hypoglycemia when compared with insulin alone (C). Oral medications should not be abruptly discontinued when starting insulin therapy because of the risk of rebound hyperglycemia (D). Analogue insulin is as effective as human insulin but is associated with less postprandial hyperglycemia and delayed hypoglycemia (B). The shortest needles (currently the 4-mm pen and 6-mm syringe needles) are safe, effective, and less painful and should be the first-line choice in all patient categories; intramuscular (IM) injections should be avoided, especially with long-acting insulins, because severe hypoglycemia may result; lipohypertrophy is a frequent complication of therapy that distorts insulin absorption, and therefore, injections and infusions should not be given into these lesions and correct site rotation will help prevent them (A). Many patients in East Africa reuse syringes for various reasons, including financial. This is not recommended by the manufacturer and there is an association between needle reuse and lipohypertrophy. However, patients who reuse needles should not be subjected to alarming claims of excessive morbidity from this practice (A). Health care authorities and planners should be alerted to the risks associated with syringe or pen needles 6 mm or longer in children (A).Entities:
Keywords: Diabetes mellitus; East Africa; Guidelines; Hyperglycemia; Hypoglycemia; Insulin therapy; Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM); Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM)
Year: 2018 PMID: 29508275 PMCID: PMC6104264 DOI: 10.1007/s13300-018-0384-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Ther Impact factor: 2.945
Fig. 1Phases of normal insulin secretion
Modified from [49]
Fig. 2Insulin injection tattoos (a) formed as a result of overslanting the needle and injecting contaminated insulin resulting from storing it in a water container (b)
Image courtesy of Silver Bahendeka
Level of evidence
| Level | Type of evidence |
|---|---|
| IA | Systematic review (with homogeneity) of RCTs |
| IB | Individual RCT (with narrow CI) |
| IC | All or none RCT |
| IIA | Systematic review (with homogeneity) of cohort studies |
| IIB | Individual cohort study (including low quality RCT, e.g., < 80% of follow-up) |
| IIC | “Outcomes” research; ecological studies |
| IIIA | Systematic review (with homogeneity) of case–control studies |
| IIIB | Individual case–control study |
| IV | Case series (poor quality cohort and case–control study) |
| V | Expert opinion without explicit critical appraisal or based on physiological bench research or “first principles” |
RCT randomized controlled trial, CI confidence interval
Grade practice recommendations
| Grade | Descriptor | Quantifying evidence | Implications for practice |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | Strong recommendation | Level I evidence or consistent findings from multiple studies of levels II, III, or IV | Clinicians should follow a strong recommendation unless a clear and compelling rationale for an alternative approach is present |
| B | Recommendation | Levels II, III, or IV evidence and findings are generally consistent | Generally, clinicians should follow a recommendation but should remain alert to a new information and sensitive to patient preferences |
| C | Option | Levels II, III, or IV evidence but findings are inconsistent | Clinicians should be flexible in their decision-making regarding appropriate practice, although they may set bounds on alternatives; patient preference should have a substantial influencing role |
| D | Option | Level V evidence: little or no systematic empirical evidence | Clinicians should consider all options in their decision-making and be alert to new published evidence that clarifies the balance of benefit versus harm; patient preference should have a substantial influencing role |
Insulins available in East Africa
| Generic | Brand | Manufacturer | Form | Onset | Peak | Duration | Availability delivery | Storage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NPH | Insulatard | Novo Nordisk | Human | 1–3 h | 4–8 h | 12–16 h | 10 mL vial, 3 mL penfill (5/box) | Refrigerate: 2–8 °C, use within 6 weeks if below 25 °C, and 4 weeks if below 30 °C |
| Insugen N | Biocon | |||||||
| Humulin N | Eli Lilly | |||||||
| Wosulin N | Wockhardt | |||||||
| Biosulin L | MJ Biopharm | |||||||
| Regular | Actrapid | Novo Nordisk | Human | 30–60 min | 2–4 h | 5–8 h | 10 mL vial, 3 mL penfill (5/box) | Refrigerate: 2–8 °C, use within 6 weeks if below 25 °C, and 4 weeks if below 30 °C |
| Insugen R | Biocon | |||||||
| Humulin R | Eli Lilly | |||||||
| Wosulin R | Wockhardt | |||||||
| Biosulin R | MJ Biopharm | |||||||
| Lispro | Humalog | Eli Lilly | Analogue | 10–20 min | 30–90 min | 3–5 h | 1 × 5 × 3 mL prefilled pen | |
| Aspart | Novo Rapid | Novo Nordisk | Analogue | 10–20 min | 30–90 min | 3–5 h | 1 × 5 × 3 mL prefilled pen | |
| Glargine | Lantus | Sanofi | Analogue | 60–90 min | No peak (8–12 h not pronounced) | 20–26 h | 1 × 5 × 3 mL prefilled pen | |
| Basolog | Biocon | 1 × 10 mL/1 × 3 mL vials | ||||||
| Detemir | Levemir | Novo Nordisk | Analogue | 60–90 min | 20–26 (17.5 h reported) | 1 × 5 × 3 mL prefilled pen | ||
| Degludec | Tresiba | Novo Nordisk | Analogue | 30–90 min | No peak | 42 h | 1 × 5 × 3 mL prefilled pen | No refrigeration for 48 days |
| Premixed NPH/Regular | Mixtard 30/70 | Novo Nordisk | Human | Dual-acting 30–60 min | Varies maximum effect 2–8 h | 10–16 h | 1 × 10 mL vials and 1 × 5 × 3 mL prefilled pens | Refrigerate: 2–8 °C, use within 6 weeks if below 25 °C, and 4 weeks if below 30 °C |
| Insugen 30/70 | Biocon | Human | ||||||
| Humalog Mix 25 | Eli Lilly | Human | ||||||
| Humalog Mix 50 | Eli Lilly | Human | ||||||
| Wosulin 30/70 | Wockhardt | Human | ||||||
| Insuman Combo 30 | Sanofi | Human | ||||||
| Aspart | NovoMix 30 (70% Protamine/30% Aspart) | Novo Nordisk | Analogue | 5–15 min | Varies; ~ 1 to 4 h | 10–16 h | 1 × 5 × 3 mL prefilled pens | Store below 30 °C |
Adopted from Uganda National Drug Authority (http://nda.or.ug/ug/register/3/Drug-Register.html), Kenya Pharmacy and Poisons Board (http://pharmacyboardkenya.org), Tanzania Food and Drug Authority (https://tfda.go.tz/portal/registered-products), Rwanda Ministry of Health (http://www.moh.gov.rw/fileadmin/user_upload/AUTHORIZED_MEDICINES_AUGUST_2017.pdf), and product leaflets
NPH neutral protamine Hagedorn
Fig. 3Initiation of insulin therapy with basal insulin. HbA1c glycated hemoglobin A1c, FPG fasting plasma glucose, GLP-1 RA glucagon like peptide-1 receptor agonist, SMBG self-monitoring of blood glucose
Modified from [104]
Fig. 4Initiation of insulin therapy with premix/insulin co-formulation. OAD oral antidiabetic agents, GLP-1 RA glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist, OD once daily, BID twice daily, TID three times in a day. *OAD can be a sulfonylurea/thiazolidinedione/dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitor or any other drug as per clinician’s judgment; **Start with OD 10–12 units (0.1–0.2 U/kg body weight). In the morning if the predinner blood glucose is high. In the evening if the prebreakfast blood glucose is high. Split the dose when dose is > 30 units. ***Intensification from OD to BID. Split the OD dose into equal breakfast and dinner doses (50:50). ****Intensification from BID to TID. Add 2–6 U or 10% of total daily premix dose before lunch. Down-titration of morning dose (− 2 to 4 U) may be needed after adding lunch dose. In both cases, continue metformin and administer premix just before meals
Modified from [54]
Comparisons between premixed human insulins vs premixed insulin analogues vs insulin co-formulation in patients with T2DM
Modified from [54]
| Parameter | Premixed human insulin | Premixed insulin analogue | Insulin co-formulation |
|---|---|---|---|
| PPG control | + | +++ | +++ |
| FPG control | ++ | ++ | +++ |
| HbA1c control | + | ++ | ++ |
| Less hypoglycemia | + | ++ | +++ |
| Mealtime flexibility | + | +++ | +++ |
| Weight gain | + | ++ | ++ |
PPG postprandial glucose, FPG fasting plasma glucose, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin A1c
Initiation of basal therapy
Modified from [17]
| Glucose value | Total daily dose | |
|---|---|---|
| Step 1: initiation with basal insulina | HbA1c < 8% (< 64 mmol/mol) | 0.1–0.2 units/kg |
| HbA1c > 8% (> 64 mmol/mol) | 0.2–0.3 units/kg | |
| Step 2: titrationb (every 2–3 days to reach glycemic goals) | Fixed regimen | Increase by 2 units/day |
| Adjustable regimen | ||
| FPG > 10 mmol/L | Add 4 units | |
| FPG 7.77–10 mmol/L | Add 2 units | |
| FPG 6.11–7.72 mmol/L | Add 1 unit | |
| Step 3: monitor for hypoglycemia | BG < 3.88 mmol/L | Reduce by 10–20% |
| BG < 2.22 mmol/L | Reduce by 20–40% | |
HbA1c glycated hemoglobin A1c, BG blood glucose, FPG fasting plasma glucose, NPH neutral protamine Hagedorn, SU sulfonylureas
aConsider discontinuing SU therapy and basal analogues should be preferred over NPH insulin
bFor most patients with T2DM taking insulin, glucose goals are HbA1c < 7% (< 53 mmol/mol) and fasting and premeal blood glucose < 6.11 mmol/L in the absence of hypoglycemia. HbA1c and FPG targets may be adjusted on the basis of patients age, duration of diabetes, presence of comorbidities, diabetic complications, and hypoglycemia risk
Intensification of premix/insulin co-formulation
Modified from [17]
| Therapeutic option | Total daily dose | |
|---|---|---|
| Step I: add prandial insulin | When glycemic targets are unmet | TDD 0.3–0.5 units/kg (40–50% basal: 50–60% prandial)a |
| Step II: titrationb (every 2–3 days to reach glycemic goals) | Fixed regimen (prandial insulin) | Increase TDD by 2 units/day |
| Adjustable regimen (prandial insulin) | ||
| FPG > 9.99 mmol/L | Increase TDD by 4 units | |
| FPG 7.77–9.99 mmol/L | Increase TDD by 2 units | |
| FPG 6.10–7.71 mmol/L | Increase TDD by 1 unit | |
| 2-h PPG or next premeal glucose > 9.99 mmol/L | Increase prandial dose for the next meal by 10% | |
| When glycemic targets are unmet | TDD 0.3–0.5 units/kg (40–50% basal: 50–60% prandial)* | |
| FPG/premeal BG > 9.99 mmol/L | Increase TDD by 10% | |
| Step III: monitor for hypoglycemia | Fasting hypoglycemia | Reduce basal insulin dose |
| Nighttime hypoglycemia | Reduce basal insulin or reduce short/rapid-acting insulin taken before supper or evening snack | |
| Between-meal hypoglycemia | Reduce previous premeal short/rapid-acting insulin | |
BG blood glucose, DPP-4 dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors, FPG fasting plasma glucose, GLP-1 glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists, NPH neutral protamine Hagedorn, PPG postprandial glucose, SGLT2 sodium glucose cotransporter 2, TDD total daily dose
aBasal + prandial insulin analogues preferred over NPH + Regular insulin or premixed insulin
bFor most patients with T2DM taking insulin, glucose goals are HbA1c < 7% (< 53 mmol/mol) and fasting and premeal blood glucose < 6.10 mmol/L in the absence of hypoglycemia. HbA1c and FPG targets may be adjusted on the basis of patient’s age, duration of diabetes, presence of comorbidities, diabetic complications, and hypoglycemia risk
Fig. 5Insulin adjustments and dose titrations in fasting young adults/adolescents with T1DM, and pregnant women during Ramadan. BG blood glucose, BID twice daily, NPH neutral protamine Hagedorn, OD once daily, TID three times a day. *Alternatively, reduced NPH dose can be taken at suhoor or at night; **adjust the insulin dose taken before suhoor; ***adjust the insulin dose taken before iftar
Adopted from [122]
Glycemic management in patients with acute febrile illness (AFI)
Adapted from [134]
| Glycemic management | |
|---|---|
| AFI patients with adequate oral intake | Frequent BGM to check for hyperglycemic episodes |
| AFI patients with compromised oral intake | Modification in diet (small portion sizes, at frequent intervals) |
| AFI patients on concomitant corticosteroid therapy | In steroid-induced or worsened hyperglycemia, subcutaneous insulin using a basal or multiple daily injections regimen |
| AFI patients with compromised hepatorenal function | Rapid-acting insulin in small, frequent doses to manage hyperglycemia |
| AFI patients with compromised sensorium | Discontinue OADs and initiate IV insulin |
| AFI in elderly patients | Frequent BGM to detect atypical symptoms of hyperglycemia and hypoglycemia |
| AFI patients with cachexia/asthenia | An insulin regimen which provides both prandial and basal coverage, such as premixed/dual action or basal plus/basal-bolus insulin in patients with lack of energy (asthenia), with or without wasting, loss of weight, muscle atrophy, fatigue, and loss of appetite (cachexia) during the febrile or convalescence phase |
OAD oral antihyperglycemic drugs, BGM blood glucose monitoring, AFI acute febrile illness, IV intravenous, IM intramuscular, SC subcutaneous
Management of diabetes in patients with HIV
Adapted from [137]
| Strategies | Management |
|---|---|
| General management | Treatment for comorbid conditions |
| Non-insulin therapies | Use metformin if well tolerated and if no contraindications are present |
| Insulin | Initiate basal-bolus regimen or premixed insulin (1.0 U/kg/day) at diagnosis |
| Changes in HAART | Pre-existing T2DM may continue to be managed after diagnosis of HIV by continuing with the same drug therapy that was being used prior to detection of HIV |
ACE angiotensin converting enzyme, ARB angiotensin receptor blockers, HIV human immunodeficiency virus, HCW health care worker, SU sulfonylurea, DPP-4 inhibitors dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors, HAART highly active antiretroviral therapy
Fig. 6Perioperative management in T1DM and T2DM patients. I/G insulin–glucose infusion, AHG antihyperglycemic agents, BGL blood glucose level. *Includes patients with T1DM as well as insulin-requiring T2DM. Adopted from perioperative diabetes management guidelines, published on the Australian Clinical Practice Guidelines website (https://www.clinicalguidelines.gov.au)
Insulin dosing for enteral/parenteral feedings
Adapted from [10]
| Situation | Basal/nutritional | Correctional |
|---|---|---|
| Continuous enteral feedings | Continue prior basal or, if none, calculate from TDD or consider 5 units NPH/detemir every 12 h or 10 units glargine/degludec daily nutritional: regular insulin every 6 h or rapid-acting insulin every 4 h, starting with 1 unit per 10–15 g of carbohydrate; adjust daily | SC regular insulin every 6 h or rapid-acting insulin every 4 h for hyperglycemia |
| Bolus enteral feedings | Continue prior basal or, if none, calculate from TDD or consider 5 units NPH/detemir every 12 h or 10 units glargine/degludec daily nutritional: give regular insulin or rapid-acting insulin SQ before each feeding, starting with 1 unit per 10–15 g of carbohydrate; adjust daily | SC regular insulin every 6 h or rapid-acting insulin every 4 h for hyperglycemia |
| Parenteral feedings | Add regular insulin to TPN IV solution, starting with 1 unit per 10 g of carbohydrate; adjust daily | SC regular insulin every 6 h or rapid-acting insulin every 4 h for hyperglycemia |
IV intravenous, SC subcutaneous, TDD total daily dose, TPN total parenteral nutrition, NPH neutral protamine Hagedorn
Fig. 7Clean boxes used to safely keep insulin and insulin syringes at home
Image courtesy of Silver Bahendeka