EBQ:Relevance of Discharge Glucose Levels

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incomplete Journal Club Article
Driver B, Olives T, Bischof J, Salmon M, Miner J. "Discharge Glucose is Not Associated With Short-Term Adverse Outcomes in Emergency Department Patients With Moderate to Severe Hyperglycemia". Annals of Emergency Medicine. 2016. 68(6):697-705.
PubMed Full text PDF

Clinical Question

Is the ED discharge glucose level associated with adverse outcomes?

Conclusion

Higher discharge glucose levels were not associated with a greater risk of repeated ED visits, hospitalization, or other adverse outcomes.

Major Points

Elevated blood glucose levels have long been known to be associated poor long term outcomes, as well as short term complications of critically ill and hospitalized patients. ED physicians, however, have long struggled with the appropriate management of moderate-severe hyperglycemia in patients appropriate to discharge from the ED. Up to this point, there are no guidelines for a "safe" discharge glucose level, or if the finding is associated with significant short term adverse outcomes. In this retrospective chart review, the authors looked at Type II diabetics with glucose readings > 400 and discharged from the ED, and sought to verify if there was an association between higher glucose levels and poor 7 day outcomes. The authors concluded that no association exists, and that attaining a specific glucose level prior to discharge in patients not requiring admission is likely less important that previously thought.

Study Design

This was a retrospective cohort chart review that searched for patients with glucose levels > 400 and discharged from the ED. Outcome measures were obtained by again searching the electronic records within the study network, as well as ambulance registry. The study took place at an urban Level I trauma center with an average ED census of 100,000 patients. The study took place from January 1, 2010 through December 31, 2011.

Population

Patient Demographics

  • 58% men, 42% women
  • Mean age = 46
  • Most common chief complaint was hyperglycemia (49%), followed by alcohol intoxication (11%)
  • Mean arrival glucose = 491

Inclusion Criteria

All patients who were over the age of 18 and had a glucose reading at any type of 400 or greater were evaluated for inclusion.

Exclusion Criteria

The following patients were excluded from the study:

  • patients admitted to the hospital
  • those known to be Type I diabetics
  • if the chief complaint was hypoglycemia

Interventions

No specific interventions were mandated in the study, and the outcomes were compared to discharge glucose absolute values, not interventions. However, the authors did include information on interventions taken to lower glucose levels while in the ED. Specifically:

  • 60% of patients received both IV fluids and SubQ insulin
  • 12% of patients received neither IV fluids or insulin.

Outcomes

Primary Outcome

Secondary Outcomes

Subgroup analysis

Criticisms & Further Discussion

  • Type I diabetes were excluded from this study, so the results should not be applied to these patients
  • Retrospective
  • Potential outcome bias, based upon the fact that patients may seek care in outside network hospitals and systems, which would not allow for the true 7 day outcomes to be measured

External Links

See Also