| Literature DB >> 35637859 |
Parag Shah1, Sanjay Kalra2, Yogesh Yadav3, Nilakshi Deka4, Tejal Lathia5, Jubbin Jagan Jacob6, Sunil Kumar Kota7, Saptrishi Bhattacharya8, Sharvil S Gadve9, K A V Subramanium10, Joe George11, Vageesh Iyer12, Sujit Chandratreya13, Pankaj Kumar Aggrawal14, Shailendra Kumar Singh15, Ameya Joshi16, Chitra Selvan17, Gagan Priya18, Atul Dhingra19, Sambit Das20.
Abstract
Glucocorticoids are potent immunosuppressive and anti-inflammatory drugs used for various systemic and localized conditions. The use of glucocorticoids needs to be weighed against their adverse effect of aggravating hyperglycemia in persons with diabetes mellitus, unmask undiagnosed diabetes mellitus, or precipitate glucocorticoid-induced diabetes mellitus appearance. Hyperglycemia is associated with poor clinical outcomes, including infection, disability after hospital discharge, prolonged hospital stay, and death. Furthermore, clear guidelines for managing glucocorticoid-induced hyperglycemia are lacking. Therefore, this consensus document aims to develop guidance on the management of glucocorticoid-induced hyperglycemia. Twenty expert endocrinologists, in a virtual meeting, discussed the evidence and practical experience of real-life management of glucocorticoid-induced hyperglycemia. The expert group concluded that we should be proactive in terms of diagnosis, management, and post-steroid care. Since every patient has different severity of underlying disease, clinical stratification would help understand patient profiles and determine the treatment course. Patients at home with pre-existing diabetes who are already on oral or injectable therapy can continue the same as long as they are clinically stable and eating adequately. However, depending on the degree of hyperglycemia, modification of doses may be required. Initiating basal bolus with correction regimen is recommended for patients in non-intensive care unit settings. For patients in intensive care unit, variable rate intravenous insulin infusion could be temporarily used, but under supervision of diabetes inpatient team, and patients can be transitioned to subcutaneous insulin once stable baseline assessment and continual evaluation are crucial for day-to-day decisions concerning insulin doses. Glycemic variability should be carefully monitored, and interventions to treat patients should also aim at achieving and maintaining euglycemia. Rational use of glucose-lowering drugs is recommended and treatment regimen should ensure maximum safety for both patient and provider. Glucovigilance is required as the steroids taper during transition, and insulin dosage should be reduced subsequently. Increased clinical and economic burden resulting from corticosteroid-related adverse events highlights the need for effective management. Therefore, these recommendations would help successfully manage GC-induced hyperglycemia and judiciously allocate resources.Entities:
Keywords: corticosteroids; diabetes; insulin; steroid-induced diabetes; steroid-induced hyperglycemia; stress hyperglycemia
Year: 2022 PMID: 35637859 PMCID: PMC9142341 DOI: 10.2147/DMSO.S330253
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Metab Syndr Obes ISSN: 1178-7007 Impact factor: 3.249
Common Indications for Use of Glucocorticoid Therapy
| ● Adrenal insufficiency | |
| Organ system | |
| Respiratory | ● Bronchial asthma |
| Rheumatologic | ● Rheumatoid arthritis |
| Dermatological | ● Acute severe dermatitis |
| Ophthalmological | ● Uveitis |
| Hematological | ● Lymphoma/leukemia |
| Endocrine | ● Subacute thyroiditis |
| Gastrointestinal | ● Ulcerative colitis |
| Renal | ● Nephrotic syndrome |
| Organ transplantation | ● Heart, kidney, liver |
| Neurological | ● Multiple sclerosis |
Standard definitions for hyperglycemia
| ● |
Glucocorticoids in Clinical Use: Preparations and Equivalent Potency
| Type of Glucocorticoid | Duration of Action (Hours) | Equivalent Potency | Relative Glucocorticoid Activity | Relative Mineralocorticoid Activity | Peak of Action (h) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Short acting | Hydrocortisone | 8–12 | 20 mg | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Cortisone | 8–12 | 25 mg | 0.8 | 0.8 | – | |
| Intermediate acting | Prednisone | 12–36 | 5 mg | 4 | 0.8 | 1–3 |
| Prednisolone | 12–36 | 5 mg | 4 | 0.8 | – | |
| Methylprednisolone | 12–36 | 4 mg | 5 | Minimal | – | |
| Triamcinolone | 12–36 | 4 mg | 5 | 0 | – | |
| Deflazacort | 12–24 | 6 mg | 4 | 1.3 | ||
| Long acting | Dexamethasone | 36–72 | 0.75 mg | 30 | Minimal | 1.6–2 |
| Betamethasone | 36–72 | 0.6 mg | 30 | Negligible | – | |
| Fludrocortisone | 12–36 | Not used for glucocorticoid activity due to very high mineralocorticoid activity | 10–15 | 125–150 | – |
Notes: Data from: Liu et al, 2013;12 Pickup, 1979;13 Möllmann et al, 1995;14 Derendorf et al, 1991;15 and Leow et al, 1986.46
Glycemic Targets (AACE)
| ● Targets for patients on glucocorticoids in domiciliary care and ward areas: <140 pre-meal and <180 post-meal. |
Dose Treatment Regimens and Duration
| Dose Effects | Prednisolone/day Equivalent Dose (mg) |
|---|---|
| Low dose | <7.5 mg per day (physiological replacement) |
| Moderate dose | 7.5–30 mg per day |
| High dose | 30 mg per day |
| Very high dose | 100 mg per day |
| Pulse therapy | 250 mg per day for one or few days |
| Short-term duration (oral corticosteroids) | <21 days |
Note: Data adapted from Buttgereit et al, 2002.17
Management of Glucocorticoid-Induced Hyperglycemia
| Patient Clinical Status | Management |
|---|---|
| Patients with pre-existing DM who are stable with no metabolic or medical compromise | ● Monitor regularly |
| Patients in Non-ICU/Ward | ● Begin basal bolus with correction regimen |
| Patients in ICU | ● Intravenous insulin |