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Thursday School 2013 Management of Inpatient Diabetes and Hyperglycemia Kendall Rogers MD CPE FACP SFHM Associate Professor Chief – Division of Hospital Medicine Objectives For This Lecture Recognize the importance of good glycemic control for hospital inpatients Appreciate the obstacles to achieving good glycemic control in hospital patients Understand and apply the best practice of inpatient hyperglycemia/diabetes management using subcutaneous insulin, including the use of anticipatory, physiologic insulin dosing in a variety of clinical situations Review special cases including steroids and discharge Case 1 56 year old woman with DM2 admitted with a diabetes-related foot infection which may require surgical debridement in the near future, eating regular meals. - Weight: 100 kg - Home medical regimen: Glipizide 10 mg po qd, Metformin 1000 mg po bid, and 20 units of NPH q HS - Control: A recent HbA1c is 10%, POC glucose in ED 240 mg/dL What are your initial orders? You put the patient on the ‘Insulin Order Set’ with the reg diet checked, ‘moderate dose’ option with nutritional and basal insulin ordered Write down: When will the CBGs be checked? Exactly what insulin is scheduled and at what times? If the patient is hypoglycemic, what will happen? Managing Diabetes in the Hospital Presents Different Challenges than Managing Diabetes in the Outpatient Arena! The hospital is associated with: - Nutritional and clinical instability - The need for changes from the home diabetes medical regimen - Acute illness, “stress-related” hyperglycemia - Use of medications that impact glycemic control Why Should We Care? Hyperglycemia occurs frequently in hospital patients, and is associated with poor outcomes Hypoglycemia occurs frequently in hospital patients, and is unpleasant and dangerous Adequate metabolic control is an attainable goal for hospital patients Inpatient Glycemic Goals GOOD BAD Hypoglycemia <40 70 BAD Somewhere in the Middle 110 140 170 Hyperglycemia >200 Recommended Inpatient Glycemic Targets Maintain fasting and preprandial BG <180 mg/dL (ideal <140 preprandial, acceptable <180) Modify therapy for BG < 100 mg/dl to avoid risk for hypoglycemia More stringent targets may be appropriate in stable patients with previous tight glycemic control. Less stringent targets may be appropriate in terminally ill patients or in patients with severe co-morbidities. UNM Glycemic Goals If 2 readings >180 in 24 hours, diabetes is uncontrolled and a change should be made to scheduled insulin Our definitions: >300 Severe Hyperglycemia 180-299 Hyperglycemia 100-180 Controlled <70 Hypoglycmia <40 Severe Hypoglycemia Recommendations for Managing Patients With Diabetes in the Hospital Setting Antihyperglycemic Therapy Insulin Recommended OADs Not Generally Recommended IV Insulin SC Insulin Critically ill patients in the ICU Non-critically ill patients 1. ACE/ADA Task Force on Inpatient Diabetes. Diabetes Care. 2006 & 2009 2. Diabetes Care. 2009;31(suppl 1):S1-S110. Considerations with non-insulin therapies in the hospital Sulfonylureas are a major cause of prolonged hypoglycemia Metformin is contraindicated in patients with decrease renal function, use of iodinated contrast dye, and any state associated with poor tissue perfusion (CHF, sepsis) Thiazolidinediones associated with edema and CHF α glucosidase inhibitors are weak glucose lowering agents Amylin and GLP1 agonists can cause nausea and exert a greater effect on postprandial glucose Time action profiles of oral agents can result in delayed achievement of target glucose ranges in hospitalized patients What is the “Best Practice” for Managing Diabetes and Hyperglycemia in the Hospital? Anticipatory, physiologic insulin dosing, prescribed as a basal/bolus insulin regimen Giving the right type of insulin, in the right amount, at the right time, to meet the insulin needs of the patient Not ‘Sliding Scale Insulin’ The Components of a Physiologic Insulin Regimen Basal insulin Nutritional insulin Correctional insulin The Components of a Physiologic Insulin Regimen Basal insulin long-acting insulin required in all Type 1 (and most Type 2) patients to maintain euglycemia by preventing gluconeogenesis Nutritional insulin scheduled short-acting insulin given just before a meal, in anticipation of the glycemic spike that occurs due to carbohydrate ingestion (this dose is given even when the blood sugar is in the normal range). Correctional insulin short-acting insulin that is given in addition to scheduled nutritional insulin (or given at other times of the day) as a response to preexisting high blood glucose levels Physiologic Insulin Secretion: Basal/Bolus Concept Nutritional (Prandial) Insulin Insulin (µU/mL) 50 25 Basal Insulin 0 Breakfast Glucose (mg/dL) 150 Lunch Supper Nutritional Glucose 100 50 0 Suppresses Glucose Production Between Meals & Overnight Basal Glucose 7 8 9 101112 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A.M. P.M. Time of Day The 50/50 Rule Providing Exogenous Basal Insulin Long-acting, non-peaking insulin is preferred as it provides continuous insulin action, even when the patient is fasting Required in ALL patients with type 1 diabetes Many patients with type 2 diabetes will require basal insulin in the hospital Can be estimated to be about 1/2 of the total daily dose of insulin (TDD) Which Insulins are Best for Basal Coverage? Insulin Effect NPH Detemir (Levemir) Glargine (Lantus) Regular Lispro (Humalog) Aspart (Novolog) Glulisine (Apidra) 0 6 12 Time (hours) 18 24 Providing Exogenous Nutritional Insulin Usually given as rapid-acting analogue (preferred in most cases) or regular insulin, for those patients who are eating meals Must be matched to the patient’s nutrition Should not be given to patients who are not receiving nutrition (e.g. NPO) Can be estimated to be about ½ of the total daily dose of insulin (TDD) Which Insulins are Best for Basal Coverage? Insulin Effect NPH Detemir (Levemir) Glargine (Lantus) Regular Lispro (Humalog) Aspart (Novolog) Glulisine (Apidra) 0 6 12 Time (hours) 18 24 Providing Exogenous Correctional Insulin Correctional insulin is extra insulin that is given to correct pre- existing hyperglycemia Usually rapid-acting or regular insulin (usually the same as the nutritional insulin) Often written in a “stepped” format that is used in addition to basal and nutritional insulin Customized to the patient using an estimate of the patient’s insulin sensitivity If correctional insulin is required consistently, or in high doses, it suggests a need to modify the basal and/or nutritional insulin doses A Stepwise Approach to Physiologic Insulin Dosing in the Hospital 1. Decide if patient is appropriate for the subcutaneous insulin and discontinue oral anti-diabetic agents 2. Calculate the estimated total daily dose (TDD) of insulin 3. Determine the distribution of the TDD between basal and nutritional insulin based on nutrition regimen. 4. Re-evaluate & adjust the TDD daily based on the glycemic control of the previous 24h Step 1: Which Patients Should be Treated with a Physiologic Insulin Regimen? During hospitalization Any patient with blood glucose levels consistently above the target range Immediately at the time of admission All patients with type 1 diabetes Patients with type 2 diabetes if… They are known to be insulin-requiring They are known to be poorly controlled despite treatment with significant doses of oral agents They are known to require high doses of oral agents that will be held in the hospital Indications for IV Insulin Therapy Prolonged fasting (>12 h) in type 1 DM Critical illness Before major surgical procedures After organ transplantation DKA Labor and delivery Acute MI Other illnesses requiring prompt glucose control ACE Position statement on inpatient diabetes 2004 Step 2: Estimate the Amount of Insulin the Patient Would Need Over One Day, If Getting Adequate Nutrition = Total Daily Dose (TDD) For patients already treated with insulin, consider the patient’s preadmission subcutaneous regimen and glycemic control on that regimen Weight-based estimate: TDD = 0.4 units x Wt in Kg Adjust down to 0.3 units x Wt in Kg for those with hypoglycemia risk factors, including kidney failure, type 1 diabetes (especially if lean), frail/low body weight/ malnourished elderly, or insulin naïve patients Adjust up to 0.5-0.6 units (or more) x Wt in Kg for those with hyperglycemia risk factors, including obesity and high-dose glucocorticoid treatment Insulin drip-based estimate Step 3: Decide Which Components of Insulin the Patient Will Require, and Which Percentage of the TDD Each Should Represent Basal insulin can generally be estimated to be 1/2 of the TDD Nutritional insulin makes up the remaining 1/2 of the TDD STEP 3: Decide Which Components of Insulin the Patient Will Require, and Which Percentage of the TDD Each Should Represent In most cases, basal insulin should be provided In most cases, well-designed corrective insulin regimens should be provided When a patient is not receiving nutrition, nutritional insulin should not be given Nutritional insulin needs must be matched to the actual nutritional intake STEP 3: Assess the Patient’s Nutritional Situation Eating meals or receiving bolus tube feeds Eating meals but with unpredictable intake Getting continuous tube feeds Getting tube feeds for only part of the day Getting parenteral nutrition NPO Examples for Initial Orders 55 yo male presents with CBG 250, HgA1c of 9.5 on 30 lantus and metformin 65 yo female with renal insufficiency presents on only glipizide, HgA1c 7.9 with CBG of 145 45 yo female presents with CBG of 320, HgA1c of 13.5 prescribed 85 units of lantus and 15 lispro each meal 47 yo male no known history of DM with CBG of 240 in ER Back to our patient 56 year old woman with DM2 admitted with a diabetesrelated foot infection which may require surgical debridement in the near future, eating regular meals. - Weight: 100 kg - Home medical regimen: Glipizide 10 mg po qd, Metformin 1000 mg po bid, and 20 units of NPH q HS - Control: A recent HbA1c is 10%, POC glucose in ED 240 mg/dL Initial Orders Stop orals Basal Insulin: 20-30 units Nutritional Insulin: 21-30 units (7-10 units each meal) Moderate dose correction scale Monitor for 24 hours and begin adjusting Other answers When will the CBGs be checked? Before each meal and at 9PM Exactly what insulin is scheduled and at what times? Before each meal and at 9PM If the patient is hypoglycemic, what will happen? STEP 4: Assess Blood Glucoses at Least Daily, Adjusting Insulin Doses as Appropriate 2 readings above 180 are consider uncontrolled Get your data Review current orders for insulin Check MAR for insulin administration for previous day Investigate meals and snacks Calculate correction scale usage There is no “autopilot” insulin regimen for a hospitalized patient! Make a change. STEP 4: Assess Blood Glucoses at Least Daily, Adjusting Insulin Doses as Appropriate Hyperglycemia Use previous correction day scale and redistribute 10/20/30/40 rule Adjust based on which values are elevated Hypoglycemia If hypoglycemic event, evaluate cause and adjust If under 100 back off insulin by 10% Issues- It is not just about glycemic target Choice of initial regimen in the hospital. Poor glycemic control ignored/accepted. Reliance on sliding scale insulin. Inappropriate follow up of hypoglycemia. “Stacking” of insulin dosing. Communication between services. Inconsistent approach to insulin ordering Nurse to physician communication. Poor coordination of tray delivery, monitoring, and insulin “Basal Plus” “Basal Plus” New regimen proposed by Umpierrez If using less than .4 u/kg/day can consider .2 u/kg basal without nutritional Must select the right patients: Known type 2 DM Diet controlled, on orals only or using <.4 u/kg at home No hepatic or renal impairment CBG <400 in hospital 2 consecutive readings >240 or daily mean BG >240 were switched to basal bolus Dangers with Basal Plus Validating inappropriate use of only basal and escalation into covering nutritional Risk of hypoglycemia Special Situations Insulin Pump Steroids Discharge Insulin Pump Some patients may remain on pump if self-managed Always consult endocrine If stopping pump, must be on subcutaneous or intravenous insulin within 30 minutes Insulin pumps must be discontinued for an MRI. If the pump is interrupted for more than one hour, another insulin source needs to be ordered. Steroids The majority of patients receiving > 2 days of glucocorticoid therapy at a dose equivalent of at least 40 mg per day of Prednisone developed hyperglycemia No glucose monitoring was performed in 24% of patients receiving high dose glucocorticoid therapy Treatment on Steroids For patients without prior DM or hyperglycemia or those with diabetes controlled with oral agents: Initiate glucose monitoring with low dose correction insulin scale administered prior to meals For patients previously treated with insulin Increase total daily dose by 20 to 40% with start of high dose steroid therapy Increase correctional insulin by one step (low to moderate dose) Adjust insulin as needed to maintain glycemic control Covering once daily prednisone If patient is taking basal/bolus already Continue same regimen Order prednisone as single AM dose daily Day 1 of prednisone: establish that prednisone hyperglycemia occurs (cover with correction) Day 2: add AM dose of NPH and titrate up to cover daytime hyperglycemia Use NPH does equal to ½ sum of correction for day 1 What to do at discharge? Transition to home begins at admission Identify, monitor, and treat all pts with hyperglycemia Draw HgA1c on all hyperglycemic pts Identify financial/social barriers to outpt management Involve DM educator (Cauleen) and SW early Do not automatically continue a hospital regimen as a home discharge regimen Use Admission HgA1c for DC Identify barriers to DM Common social issues Poor home support Transportation issues Drug of etoh Common financial barriers No insurance High deductibles Outpatient Meds Discharge Summary Use HgA1c to predict needs Choose affordable treatment regimens Involve Cauleen for DC education Arrange follow-up for all uncontrolled pts Utilize DC3 DM Resources at UNM Cauleen Svanda, Inpatient DM educator Diabetes Comprehensive Care Center (DC3) Glycemic Control Nurse Practitioner UNM Hospitalist Wiki Site – type ‘glycemic control’ Powerchart Order Set Cache List Insulin Dynamic Dashboard Glycemic Control Points Above 180 twice is ‘uncontrolled DM’ and a change needs to be made in insulin management Use of correction scale is sign of a treatment failure Uncontrolled DM should be on all 3 insulins Avoid clinical inertia, make changes to insulin Check MAR and administration times Hypoglycemia Severe Hyperglycemia Kendall Rogers, MD Case 1 56 year old woman with DM2 admitted with a diabetes-related foot infection which may require surgical debridement in the near future, eating regular meals. - Weight: 100 kg - Home medical regimen: Glipizide 10 mg po qd, Metformin 1000 mg po bid, and 20 units of NPH q HS - Control: A recent HbA1c is 10%, POC glucose in ED 240 mg/dL What are your initial orders? Case 1: Solution Bedside glucose testing AC and HS Discontinue oral agents Total daily dose 100 kg x 0.6 units/kg/day = 60 Basal: Glargine 30 units q HS Nutritional: Rapid-acting analogue 10 units q ac at the first bite of each meal Correction: Rapid-acting analogue per scale q ac and HS (Note: Use correctional insulin with caution at HS, reduce the daytime correction by up to 50% to avoid nocturnal hypoglycemia) How would you alter this if the patient had renal failure? Prior Day Glucose 8 AM Noon Supper Bedtime 254 295 238 291 Insulin Lispro Glargine TDD Total 18 u 18 u 16 u 8u 60 u 30 u 30 u 90 u What is your next step? A. Continue the current regimen B. Increase the Basal insulin by 20 units C. Increase the Nutritional Insulin by 5 units/meal D. Increase the Basal by 15 units and the Nutritional by 15 units (5 with each meal) E. Increase the Basal by 10 units and the Nutritional by 6 units (2 with each meal) Prior Day Glucose 8 AM Noon Supper Bedtime 254 295 238 291 Insulin Total Lispro Mealtime 10 u 10 u 10 u Lispro Correctional 8u 8u 6u Glargine TDD 30 u 8u 30 u 30 u 30 u 90 Case 1 Continued… The patient is made NPO after midnight for a bone biopsy, but is expected to be able to resume her diet at lunch or dinner the next day. What changes would you make to her management program regarding glucose monitoring and her insulin program? Case 1 continued: Solution Change bedside glucose checks to q 4 hours, as the patient will not be eating meals Continue basal insulin: If using glargine, continue as is. If using NPH, continue in equal twice daily doses with a dose reduction of 1/3-1/2 while NPO. Hold nutritional insulin while NPO Continue appropriate correctional insulin for hyperglycemia Case 2 58 yo M admitted to Vascular surgery team for amputation of RLE for dry gangrene. Medicine consulted on POD #3 for diabetic management. At home he is on max doses of metformin and glyburide and glargine 15 units at bedtime. His HgA1c this admission is 9.2 and there is a question about his compliance in PCP notes. He is on regular SSI and glargine 15 units at bedtime Case 2 Continued POD 1: POD 2 AM CBG: 85 AM CBG: 182 Noon CBG: 248 Noon CBG: 255 Dinner CBG: 166 Dinner CBG: 72 Bedtime CBG: 287 Dinner CBG: 207 SSI given 12 units SSI given 12 units Case 2 Continued What would you do next? A) Divide total daily dose into 50/50 basal and bolus B) Yell at Vascular surgery for using SSI C) Gather more information on meal intake, time of CBG measurements and insulin administration D) Continue with current regimen one more day to gather more data Case 2 Explanation Answer is C Gather more information on meal intake, time of CBG measurements and insulin administration Patient with labile CBGs, but good response to insulin. With history of non-compliance he maybe not eating or snacking in between meals. CBG time and insulin administration may also play an effect. Before dividing CBG 50/50 you need to gather more data. You can make changes to insulin regime after you gather more data. Case 2 Continued His CBGs in POD #1 and 2 are the following POD 1: AM CBG: 85, no insulin given, day prior glargine was given Noon CBG: 248, 4 units Dinner CBG: 166, 2 units Bedtime CBG: 287, 6 units given, glargine held POD 2 AM CBG: 182, 2 units given Noon CBG: 255, 6 units given Dinner CBG: 72, no insulin given Dinner CBG: 207, 4 units insulin and 15 units glargine given Case 3 56 year old woman with type 1 diabetes admitted with a diabetesrelated foot infection. The wound is an infected ulcer on the fifth digit with necrosis. The plan is for amputation first thing in the morning, so the patient will be NPO after midnight. However, she is expected to resume a regular diet at lunch the following day after surgery. - Weight: 70 kg - Home medical regimen: 70/30 insulin 14 units BID - Control: A recent HbA1c is 9%, POC glucose in ED is 240 mg/dL It is now dinner time, and the patient took her last dose of insulin before breakfast. What insulin would you give her now (before dinner) and how would you modify her regimen given the plan for NPO after midnight? Case 3: Solution Bedside glucose testing AC and HS while eating, and q 4 hours when NPO TDD by weight = 70 kg x 0.4 units/kg/day = 28 units Her home TDD is 28, but patient has very poor control on this regimen, so increase (arbitrarily) by 20% = 34 units IV dextrose infusion while NPO (e.g. D5 at 75-150 cc/hr) Basal: Glargine 17 units q HS Nutritional: Rapid-acting insulin 6 units q ac at the first bite of each meal Correction: Rapid-acting insulin per scale q ac and HS Case 4 77 yo 100kg M with COPD and T2DM is admitted for syncopal episode and pyelonephritis. He reports being clammy and shaky prior to passing. Per EMS CBG was 50. He is from Alabama and uses 70/30 80 units in am and 20 units at bedtime. He takes his meds as prescribed, but has had poor appetite during the past several days. Does not remember his HgA1C. What insulin regimen would you place him on? Case 4 A) Continue home dose of insulin B) Calculate TDD based on weight and place patient on glargine and short acting insulin C) Place on SSI and monitor CBGs for 24 hours D) Call Kendall or Pejvak E) None of the above Case 4 Explanation Answer: none of the above First correct hypoglycemia Once normalized, consider 20u of basal with correction scale, no nutritional until eating well. Then you can place on nutritional and correctional insulin. Basal glargine insulin has much lower incidence of hypoglycemia than NPH Case 5 You are consulted by the neurology service for diabetes management on a 79 y/o M who suffered a large stroke, leaving him with severe dysphagia. He has type 2 diabetes, on maximum doses of metformin, glipizide, and rosiglitazone at home. A PEG was placed and he is up to his goal of 60 cc/hr on continuous tube feeds, but is now hyperglycemic (see next slide). - Weight: 100 kg (BMI 35) - Current medical regimen: “High” sliding-scale (orals all held) - Control: Glucoses consistently in the mid to high 200’s, a recent HbA1c is 9.6% What insulin regimen will you choose? Does the distinction between basal and nutritional insulin still make sense with continuous feeding? Case 5: Solution TDD = 100 x 0.6 units/kg/day = 60 units Provide this TDD to meet basal and continuous nutritional insulin requirements There is no scientific evidence suggesting one way is better than another Examples: Glargine 60 units daily Glargine 24 units daily (basal) + rapid-acting insulin 6 units q4 hrs (nutritional) Glargine 24 units daily (basal) + regular 9 units q6 hrs (nutritional) 70/30 20 units q8 hrs Regular insulin 15 units q6 hrs Rapid-acting insulin 10 units q 4 hrs Other combinations How would you manipulate this patient’s insulin as you initiate tube feeds? Bolus feeds TID Nocturnal Tube Feeds Case 6 62 yo M with COPD is admitted with increased cough, sputum production and green/thick sputum. CXR consistent with pneumonia. He is started on ceftraixone, doxy, duonebs and prednisone 60mg/day. He does not have diabetes, but he reports that during prior hospitalizations and with steroid use he has “needed insulin injections.” What would you do next? Case 6 Answers A) Calculate TDD insulin and place on Glargine and Aspart B) Place on SSI and monitor CBGs for 24 hours and change to basal/bolus after 24 hours C) Given infection and taper of steroids, monitor CBGs and put on correction insulin D) Do nothing Case 6 Explanation Answer C then maybe B Patient has an acute infection and is on steroids. This combination leads to increased CBGs. However, as infection is treated and steroids tapered, his insulin requirement will decrease. This could lead to unpredictable CBGs and increased risk of hypoglycemia on basal/bolus protocol. Treating increased CBGs shortens hospital stay. If 2 CBGs are above 180 daily, consider using basal/bolus protocol Case 6 Part 2 Patient did well and after 3 days of treatment is ready to be discharged on 14 day taper of steroids. Currently he is on 40mg prednisone and required 4 units of insulin yesterday. Would you discharge this patient in insulin? A) Yes B) No Case 6 Part 2 Explanation Answer is B) NO Patient is not used to using injectable insulin and there is no indication to start him on oral glycemic meds as he has not have a diagnosis of DM. In addition, as mentioned previously, as prednisone is tapers his CBGs will decrease to more normal range and he is at increased risk for hypoglycemia. Case 7 52 yo male, no previous history of dm, admitted for CAP with an O2 requirement, his admission cbg is 210 Wt 60kg What orders would you write? What if the patient had known DM was on 1 oral agent with relatively good control? Case 8 53 yo M with DM, HTN and CAD is admitted for unstable angina to the VAMC. At home he takes NPH 30 units QAM and 30 units QPM, in addition to sliding scale regular insulin. He reports good CBG control at home and uses 7-10units of insulin prior to meals. His last HgA1c is 6.8. He is NPO for possible cardiac cath in the morning. What regimen would you place him on? Case 8 Answers A) Calculate TDD and place on 50/50 basal bolus insulin and correctional insulin B) Decrease NPH by 50% and place on correctional insulin while NPO C) Continue home NPH and correctional insulin D) Convert total home insulin use to glargine and aspart insulin premeal and correctional insulin Case 8 Explanation Answer is B Patient has good control with NPH at home with HgA1c at goal. Due to increased ease of transition from inpatient to outpatient diabetes management, NPH should be continued. However, NPH has increased risk of hypoglycemia if patient is NPO. Dose should be decreased by 1/3 to 1/2 if patient is NPO. Since patient is not eating, his CBGs can be monitored per protocol and treated with correctional insulin while NPO. Once patient is eating, he can be placed on home NPH dose, premeal and correctional insulin Case 9 42 yo on 160 u with HgA1c of 14.3 admitted with pneumonia and current CBG is 260. What are your admit insulin orders? Case 10 39 yo F with obesity, DM and HTN is admitted to the VAMC with hypertensive urgency. She takes metformin and glyburide with last HGA1c 8.3. He weight is 120kg and BMI 33. She is able to eat. What regime would you place her on at the VA and at the UH respectively. Insulin Order Sets UNM Order Set VA Order Set Summary Understanding these basic principles of physiologic, anticipatory insulin will allow clinicians to formulate rational insulin regimens in virtually any clinical situation! Key Review Articles Inzucchi. Management of Hyperglycemia in the Hospital Setting. N Engl J Med 2006;355:1903-11. Clement and colleagues. Diabetes Care 2004; 27: 553-91. American College of Endocrinology Position Statement on Inpatient Diabetes and Metabolic Control. Endocrine Practice 2004; 10: 77-82. American College of Endocrinology and American Diabetes Association Consensus Statement on Inpatient Diabetes and Glycemic Control. Diabetes Care 2006; 29: 1955-62.