ODP231 Outcomes of Weight-based vs. Constant-based Insulin Infusion for Treatment of Diabetic Ketoacidosis in Non-ICU Patients

Abstract Background The American Diabetes Association's guidelines for treatment of diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) have explicit guidelines on the use of a weight-based insulin infusion to rapidly correct a patient's blood glucose and acidosis. Despite close monitoring, insulin infusion requi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the Endocrine Society 2022-11, Vol.6 (Supplement_1), p.A328-A329
Hauptverfasser: Alrifai, Nada, Alvi, Zara, Bononi, Patricia, Chalasani, Varun, Gadani, Mrudula, Huffman, Deanna, Patadia, Palak, Vusqa, Urwat
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Background The American Diabetes Association's guidelines for treatment of diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) have explicit guidelines on the use of a weight-based insulin infusion to rapidly correct a patient's blood glucose and acidosis. Despite close monitoring, insulin infusion requires close monitoring and carries a risk of hypoglycemia, leading to adverse outcomes. While weight-based insulin infusions are designed to infuse a steady rate of insulin based on the patient's weight, constant-based insulin infusions are designed to infuse insulin based on a "constant" which represents the patient's sensitivity to insulin. Although constant-based insulin infusions are used at many institutions, there are no recommendations from any professional organization on when to use a constant-based insulin infusion. The goal of this quality improvement study was to evaluate our clinical use of weight-based and constant-based insulin infusions on the quality of care for patients admitted with diabetic ketoacidosis. Methods A retrospective review of non-ICU patients admitted with diabetic ketoacidosis over a one-year period was performed. Patients were divided into four groups for analysis based upon their insulin infusion protocol. Group 1 (n = 150) received weight-based insulin infusions throughout the study; Group 2 (n = 31) received constant-based insulin infusions throughout the study; Group 3 (n = 114) was started on weight-based insulin infusions and then switched to constant-based insulin infusions; and Group 4 (n = 6) was started on constant-based insulin infusions and then switched to weight-based insulin infusions. The primary outcome variables were hypoglycemic events and severe hypoglycemic events occurring during the initial infusion protocol and after a change from the initial infusion protocol to another protocol (if applicable). Hypoglycemia was defined as glucose levels between 41-70mg/dl and severe hypoglycemia as glucose level
ISSN:2472-1972
2472-1972
DOI:10.1210/jendso/bvac150.681