| Literature DB >> 35507117 |
Rodolfo J Galindo1, Ketan Dhatariya2, Fernando Gomez-Peralta3, Guillermo E Umpierrez4.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The field of inpatient diabetes has advanced significantly over the last 20 years, leading to the development of personalized treatment approaches. However, outdated guidelines still recommend the use of basal-bolus insulin therapy as the preferred treatment approach, and against the use of non-insulin anti-hyperglycemic agents. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Hospital diabetes; Inpatient hyperglycemia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35507117 PMCID: PMC9065239 DOI: 10.1007/s11892-022-01464-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Diab Rep ISSN: 1534-4827 Impact factor: 5.430
Current anti-diabetic treatment patterns in hospitalized patients with diabetes: USA, UK, and Spain
| USA | UK | Spain | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prevalence of diabetes | 10.2% [ | 7.5% [ | 13.8% [ |
| Prevalence of inpatient hyperglycemia | 20–40% non-critically ill patients [ Up to 40% of critically ill patients [ Up to 60–80% post-cardiac surgery [ | 18.1 to 31% [ | 18.4% non-critically ill patients (4% with stress hyperglycemia) [ |
| Use of non-insulin agents | Limited data | 39.3% (17.6% on diet only) [ | Any oral agent 8.9% [ Metformin 6.5% Sulfonylurea 1.2% Glinide 0.8% SGLT-2 inhibitor 0.4% DPP-4 inhibitor 2.3% GLP1-RA 0% |
Use of insulin sliding scale alone (also known as variable dose subcutaneous bolus insulin regimen) | 31 to 40% [ | 6.6% type 1, 35% insulin treated type 1 diabetes, with 8% being on insulin infusion [ | 20.7% [ |
Selection of antihyperglycemic agents in the hospital
| Regimen | Consider | Avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Mild stress hyperglycemia (no history of diabetes), treatment-naïve patients with diabetes with mild hyperglycemia (BG < 180 mg/dL) on admission | T1D, moderate stress hyperglycemia, or T2D with severe admission hyperglycemia (> 200mg/dL) | |
| Medical or surgical patients with BG > 200 mg/dL, treated at home with oral agents or low-dose insulin < 0.6 unit/kg/day | T1D, T2D on high-dose insulin regimen prior to admission | |
| T1D, T2D on complex regimen at home, severe hyperglycemia, steroid-induced hyperglycemia, HbA1c > 9% | Poor oral intake, frail, kidney failure with minimal requirements, low life expectancy, insulin naïve with mild hyperglycemia | |
| Stable patients with T2D treated with metformin at home or patients close to hospital discharge | T1D, renal failure, fluctuating renal function, hypoxia, sepsis, liver failure, undergoing procedures | |
| Not routinely recommended | T1D, kidney failure, frail patients, poor oral intake | |
| Not routinely recommended | Contraindicated in heart failure | |
| Medical/surgical patients with T2D with mild hyperglycemia (BG < 200 mg/dL). Combine with basal insulin if BG > 200 mg/dL. | T1D, history of pancreatitis, severe hyperglycemia, HbA1c > 9%, patients on high-dose insulin regimens. | |
| Not routinely recommended. Potential role in the perioperative period (limited experience) | T1D, patients with gastrointestinal symptoms or history of pancreatitis | |
| Potentially in patients with acutely decompensated HFrEF with good oral intake (limited experience) | T1D, and most patients with T2D until more evidence is available. |
• If patients are eating, we recommend close monitoring to advance regimen and add basal and/or prandial insulin as needed for persistent hyperglycemia above targets (see Fig. 1)
• HFrEF heart failure with reduced ejection fraction
Fig. 1Personalized treatment in non-ICU hospitalized patients with T2D **Regimen complexity refers to the number and type of agents (oral agents, GLP-1RA, and insulin) used in the outpatient setting, with more complex regimens referring to those including multiple agents and/or insulin therapy. SSI refers to use of correctional sliding scale insulin. Patients on multiple agents are likely to have worsening hyperglycemia if all preadmission agents are stopped and may respond better to basal + OAD or a basal-bolus approach [95]