In-Hospital Management of Diabetes. Dr Benjamin Schiff Assistant Professor McGill University

Similar documents
Managing Perioperative Diabetes What s new? Kathryn A. Myers MD FRCPC Chair Chief Division of GIM Professor of Medicine Western University

Table 1. Antihyperglycemic agents for use in type 2 diabetes

DIABETES DEBATE - IS NEW BETTER?

Quick Reference Guide

Canadian Society of Internal Medicine Annual Meeting 2016 Montreal, QC

CASES DR TINA KADER MCGILL JGH; LMC CVPH CDE

Antihyperglycemic Agents in Diabetes. Jamie Messenger, PharmD, CPP Department of Family Medicine East Carolina University August 18, 2014

Objectives. Recognize all available medical treatment options for diabetes. Individualize treatment and glycemic target based on patient factors

Society for Ambulatory Anesthesia Consensus Statement on Perioperative Blood Glucose Management in Diabetic Patients Undergoing Ambulatory Surgery

What the Pill Looks Like. How it Works. Slows carbohydrate absorption. Reduces amount of sugar made by the liver. Increases release of insulin

MANAGING DIABETES IN 2016 WHAT TO ADD, WHEN AND WHY?

APPENDIX American Diabetes Association. Published online at

Tips and Tricks for Starting and Adjusting Insulin. MC MacSween The Moncton Hospital

Oral and Injectable Non-insulin Antihyperglycemic Agents

What s New in Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes? Updates from 2013 CDA CPGs and Advancements in Insulin Therapy

Basal Bolus Insulin Therapy Frequently Asked Questions

TABLE 1A : Formulary Coverage of Insulin Therapies & Indications for Use in Various Populations

Quick Reference Guide

Medications for Diabetes

Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Insulin Therapy 2012

TABLE 1A: Formulary Coverage of Insulin Therapies & Indications for Use in Various Populations

MANAGING DIABETES IN 2017 WHAT TO ADD, WHEN AND WHY? December 8, 2017 Maria Wolfs MD MHSc FRCPC

Agenda. Indications Different insulin preparations Insulin initiation Insulin intensification

PERIOPERATIVE DIABETES GUIDELINE

Type 2 Diabetes: Where Do We Start with Treatment? DIABETES EDUCATION. Diabetes Mellitus: Complications and Co-Morbid Conditions

Hot Topics: The Future of Diabetes Management Cutting Edge Medication and Technology-Based Care

INSULIN 101: When, How and What

Nph insulin conversion to lantus

Quick Reference Guide

Guide to Starting and Adjusting Insulin for Type 2 Diabetes*

Insulin 301: Case, after case, after case

Inpatient Management of Hyperglycemia Guillermo Umpierrez, MD, CDE Saturday, February 10, :30 a.m. 11:15 a.m.

Diabetes Update 10/12/2017. Section #1 OBJECTIVE. Lab features to consider:

Objectives 2/13/2013. Figuring out the dose. Sub Optimal Glycemic Control: Moving to the Appropriate Treatment

Special Situations 1

Comprehensive Diabetes Treatment

Drugs used in Diabetes. Dr Andrew Smith

Canadian Diabetes Association 2013

Insulin Prior Authorization with optional Quantity Limit Program Summary

Images have been removed from the PowerPoint slides in this handout due to copyright restrictions. Insulins. Rapid Short Intermediate Long Mix

What s New in Diabetes Medications. Jena Torpin, PharmD

9/29/ Disclosure. Learning Objectives. Diabetes Update: Guidelines, Treatment Options & Trends

Initiation and Adjustment of Insulin Regimens for Type 2 Diabetes

PHARMACISTS INTERACTIVE EDUCATION CASE STUDIES

Inpatient Management of Hyperglycemia Guillermo Umpierrez, MD, CDE Saturday, February 10, :30 a.m. 11:15 a.m.

Fasted and Consented but Blood Glucose 18mmol/L or How to Manage Diabetes in the Peri-Operative Period

2018 Diabetes Summit Managing Diabetes: An Art and a Science

Diabetes Head to Toe May 31, 2017

Inpatient Glycemic Management:

Stroke Hyperglycemia Insulin Network Effort (SHINE) Trial Treatment Protocols. Askiel Bruno, MD, MS Protocol PI

Objectives. Kidney Complications With Diabetes. Case 10/21/2015

Wayne Gravois, MD August 6, 2017

PHARMACISTS INTERACTIVE EDUCATION CASE STUDIES

DIABETES. overview of pharmacologic agents used in the management of. Overview 4/3/2014 OBJECTIVES. Injectable Agents

Insulin Initiation and Intensification. Disclosure. Objectives

Endo 2 SLO Practice (online) Page 1 of 7

Αναγκαιότητα και τρόπος ρύθμισης του διαβήτη στους νοσηλευόμενους ασθενείς

Rebecca Newberry APRN MS CDE

Joslin Diabetes Center Joslin Diabetes Forum 2013: The Impact of Comorbidities on Glucose Control Scenario 2: Reduced Renal Function

Type. Diabetes Drugs. A Review

Diabetes Management in New Brunswick Nursing Homes

Inpatient Diabetes 20/01/2015. What should I do? Hyperglycaemia why does it matter? Why are the BSLs unstable? BSL parameters

Inpatient Diabetes Management: The Slippery Slope of Sliding Scale Insulin

Disclaimers 22/03/2018. Role of DPP-4 Inhibitors, GLP-1 Agonists, and SGLT-2 Inhibitors in the treatment of Diabetes Mellitus Type 2

I. General Considerations

New Therapies for Diabetes Management: Hope or Headache?

What s New in Type 2 Diabetes? 2018 Diabetes Updates

Management of Diabetes New Concepts New Devices New Medications. Richard J. Comi, MD Professor of Medicine Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth

EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT DIABETES DRUGS MAY 5, David Leeson R.Ph., B.Sc., B.Sc.Pharm., CDE St. Joseph s Health Care London

Diabetes Management: A diagnostic perspective

Initiating Injectable Therapy in Type 2 Diabetes

Comparative Effectiveness, Safety, and Indications of Insulin Analogues in Premixed Formulations for Adults With Type 2 Diabetes Executive Summary

Pharmacology Updates. Quang T Nguyen, FACP, FACE, FTOS 11/18/17

Disclosure 1/16/2017. Michael R. Brennan D.O., M.S., F.A.C.E Director Beaumont Endocrine Center Chief of Endocrine Beaumont Grosse Pointe 1/16/2017 2

Update on Therapies for Type 2 Diabetes: Angela D. Mazza, DO July 31, 2015

Diabetes Mellitus II CPG

DIABETES. Mary Bruskewitz APNP, MS, BC-ADM Clinical Nurse Specialist Diabetes. November 2013

The Many Faces of T2DM in Long-term Care Facilities

Reviewing Diabetes Guidelines. Newsletter compiled by Danny Jaek, Pharm.D. Candidate

Insulin Regimens: Hitting Glycemia Targets

Diabetes: Inpatient Glucose control

Timely!Insulinization In!Type!2! Diabetes,!When!and!How

Pharmacology. Kacy Aderhold, MSN, APRN-CNS, CMSRN

Pharmacologic Agents for Treatment of Type 2 Diabetes

Thursday School 2010 Management of Inpatient Diabetes and Hyperglycemia and Quality Improvement Efforts

Management of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus. Heather Corn, MD, MS Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism

The Diabetes Guidelines Trek: The Next Generation. Inpatient Diabetes Guidelines. Learning Objectives. Current Inpatient Guidelines

Inpatient Management of Diabetes Mellitus. Jessica Garza, Pharm.D. PGY-1 Pharmacotherapy Resident TTUHSC School of Pharmacy

DIABETES INDICATIONS FOR INSULIN

Evidence for Basal Bolus Insulin Versus Slide Scale Insulin

Diabetes, Type 2 Management

Basal-Bolus Insulin Therapy. Veronica Brady, PhD, FNP-BC, BC-ADM, CDE ECHO January

Faculty/Presenter Disclosure

Current Clinical Practice Guideline for Diabetes Management

第十五章. Diabetes Mellitus

Objectives. How Medicine Works to Control Blood Sugar Levels. What Happens When We Eat? What is diabetes? High Blood Glucose (Hyperglycemia)

Objectives. Navigating New Insulins. Disclosures. Diabetes: The Stats. Normal Insulin Release Individuals without diabetes. History of Insulin 5/23/17

Self-Monitoring Blood Glucose (SMBG) Frequency & Pattern Tool

How they work and when to take them. Diabetes Medications

INSULIN OVERVIEW. Type Brand Name Onset Peak Duration Role in glucose management Page Rapid-Acting lispro min. 3-5 hrs min.

Transcription:

In-Hospital Management of Diabetes Dr Benjamin Schiff Assistant Professor McGill University

No conflict of interest to declare

CLINICAL SCENARIO 62 y/o male with hx of DM 2, COPD, and HT is admitted with 2 days of cough and fever He is taking metformin, glyburide and saxigliptin Home sugars usually in the 8-10 range (well controlled, as per patient) Patient is generally well, though appetite has been a bit diminshed in the past 2-3 days Random glucose on admission is 11.1, Cr is 70, egfr of 80 ml/min Treatment includes antibiotic, bronchodilators and oral steroids How should you manage his diabetes?

Outline Goals of therapy Factors affecting glucose Brief review of medications Co-morbid conditions Approach to management Sliding scales Steroids Tips and Pitfalls D/C planning

In-Hospital Hyperglycemia is Common Hyperglycemia Approximately 1/3 of inpatients have been found to have hyperglycemia Many have pre-existing diabetes prior to admission

Adverse Effects of Hyperglycemia Hyperglycemia Increases risks of postoperative infections and delirium Prolonged hospital stay, resource utilization Increased renal dysfunction and renal allograft rejection in transplant

In-Hospital Glycemic Targets Patient Type Glucose Target (mmol/l) Non-critically ill Fasting 5-8 Random <10 Therapy of choice Pre-hospital regimen OR basal-boluscorrection Critically ill 8-10 IV insulin infusion CABG intraop 5.5-10 IV insulin infusion Other periop 5-10 As appropriate CABG = coronary artery bypass graft; IV = intravenous; Intraop = intraoperative; periop = perioperative

FACTORS INFLUENCING GLYCEMIC CONTROL Diet ( ) Mobility/Exercise Acute illness IV (D5W) Artificial feeding (TPN) Medications Co-morbidities (renal failure, liver failure)

Medication Review: Metformin First line in Type 2 Diabetes Lactic Acidosis main concern Liver disease; hold Renal Failure (CrCL<30, or 30-60 and conditions associated with hypoperfusion/hypoxemia); hold or adjust dose Acute and/or unstable CHF; hold IV contrast: Hold before and 48hr post

Class -glucosidase inhibitor (acarbose) Incretin agents: DPP-4 Inhibitors GLP-1R agonists Add another class of agent best suited to the individual (agents listed in alphabetical order): Relative A1C Lowering Hypoglycemia Weight Effect in Cardiovascular Outcome Trial Other therapeutic considerations Rare neutral to Improved postprandial control, GI sideeffects to Rare Rare Neutral to Neutral (alo, saxa, sita) Neutral (lixi) Caution with saxagliptin in heart failure GI side-effects Insulin Yes Neutral (glar) No dose ceiling, flexible regimens $- $$$$ Insulin secretagogue: Meglitinide Sulfonylurea Yes Yes SGLT2 inhibitors to Rare Superiority (empa in T2DM patients with clinical CVD) Less hypoglycemia in context of missed meals but usually requires TID to QID dosing Gliclazide and glimepiride associated with less hypoglycemia than glyburide Genital infections, UTI, hypotension, dose-related changes in LDL-C, caution with renal dysfunction and loop diuretics, dapagliflozin not to be used if bladder cancer, rare diabetic ketoacidosis (may occur with no hyperglycemia) Thiazolidinediones Rare Neutral CHF, edema, fractures, rare bladder cancer (pioglitazone), cardiovascular controversy (rosiglitazone), 6-12 weeks required for maximal effect Weight loss agent (orlistat) None GI side effects $$$ Cost $$ $$$ $$$$ $$ $ $$$ $$ 2016

Types of Insulin 2016 Insulin Type (trade name) Onset Peak Duration Bolus (prandial) Insulins Rapid-acting insulin analogues (clear): Insulin aspart (NovoRapid ) Insulin glulisine (Apidra ) Insulin lispro (Humalog ) Insulin lispro U200 (Humalog 200 units/ml) 10-15 min 10-15 min 10-15 min 10-15 min 1-1.5 h 1-1.5 h 1-2 h 1-2 h 3-5 h 3-5 h 3.5-4.75 h 3.5-4.75 h Short-acting insulins (clear): Insulin regular (Humulin -R) Insulin regular (Novolin getoronto) 30 min 2-3 h 6.5 h Basal Insulins Intermediate-acting insulins (cloudy): Insulin NPH (Humulin -N) Insulin NPH (Novolin ge NPH) 1-3 h 5-8 h Up to 18 h Long-acting basal insulin analogues (clear) Insulin detemir (Levemir ) Insulin glargine (Lantus ) Insulin glargine U300 (Toujeo ) Insulin glargine (Basaglar TM ) 90 min 90 min Up to 6 h 90 min Not applicable Up to 24 h (detemir 16-24 h) Up to 24 h (glargine 24 h) Up to 30 h Up to 24 h (glargine 24 h)

Types of Insulin (continued) 2016 Premixed Insulins Insulin Type (trade name) Premixed regular insulin NPH (cloudy): 30% insulin regular/ 70% insulin NPH (Humulin 30/70) 30% insulin regular/ 70% insulin NPH (Novolin ge 30/70) 40% insulin regular/ 60% insulin NPH (Novolin ge 40/60) 50% insulin regular/ 50% insulin NPH (Novolin ge 50/50) Time action profile A single vial or cartridge contains a fixed ratio of insulin (% of rapid-acting or short-acting insulin to % of intermediate-acting insulin) Premixed insulin analogues (cloudy): 30% Insulin aspart/70% insulin aspart protamine crystals (NovoMix 30) 25% insulin lispro / 75% insulin lispro protamine (Humalog Mix25 ) 50% insulin lispro / 50% insulin lispro protamine (Humalog Mix50 )

Renal Failure Diabetic patients at risk, even if not previously known RF Common complication of acute medical illnesses Increases risk of hypoglycemia Closely monitor renal function, reassess management (diabetes meds, other nephrotoxic medications, etc)

Liver Disease Metformin and lactic acidosis Risk of hypoglycemia (hepatic gluconeogenesis) Concomitant pancreatic dysfunction (exocrine and endocrine)

Approach to Management Complete Hx, including dietary history, home values (if available), medications, diabetic complications (RF) Labs, including Urea, Cr, K+, and HgB A1C Determine goals of glycemic control ("tight" vs relaxed, short term vs long term) Evaluate and anticipate impact of acute illness(es) on glucose control and choice of medication

Management (cont d) Diabetic diet Accuchecks (frequency and duration individualized) Preference is to continue usual medications when possible (including insulin) Reassess management as clinical situation changes Judicious use of sliding scale Above all, avoid hypoglycemia (ensure protocol exists)

Insulin Sliding Scales Indications On home insulin NPO or variable PO intake Artificial feeding (parenteral or enteral) Acutely ill Peri-operative Co-morbities, especially liver disease, renal failure Use of steroids

Sliding Scales Short-acting insulin Often QiD, but increased risk of hypoglycemia overnight Alternatively TiD AC meals +/- ½ dose at HS Both CDA and ADA recommend against using sliding scale alone (Reactive rather than proactive) Total daily dosing used to covert to basal/bolus

Sliding Scale Insulin Alone Results in Variable Glucose Control BG (mmol/l) 10.0 4.0 What do you do? 14.0 6.0 What do you do? +4 U 0 U 0 U Breakfast Lunch Dinner Bedtime Bolus insulin QID 6.0 What do you do? QID: four times daily; SSI: sliding-scale insulin; BG: blood glucose 16.5 What do you do? +6 U 3.0 Sliding Scale alone BG (mmol/l) Bolus insulin (U) < 4 Call MD 4.1 10.0 0 10.1 13.0 2 13.1 16.0 4 16.1 19.0 6 > 19.0 Call MD

10.0 4.0 BASAL + BOLUS + CORRECTION Results in Smoother Glycemic Control 6+0 U What do you do? 6.0 Breakfast Lunch Dinner Bedtime 6U 6.0 What do you do? 6+0 U 6U 6+2 U What do you do? 12.0 ROUTINE Bolus insulin 6U What do you do? 6.0 18 U Basal insulin Routine Basal Correctional Insulin AC meals BG (mmol/l) Bolus insulin (U) < 4 Call MD 4.1 10.0 0 10.1 13.0 2 13.1 16.0 4 16.1 19.0 6 > 19.0 Call MD

Sliding Scales I begin with basic sliding scale, and review the glycemic readings Adjust the scale according to readings: if glu 10.1-13 4 units 13.1-16 6 units 16.1-18 8 units 18.1-22 10 units 22.1-26 12 units > 26 14 units Next step(s) depend on anticipated duration of the need for the sliding scale I don t necessarily include call MD

Steroids Variable effect on glycemic control Can cause hyperglycemia in non-diabetics Particular risk with Prednisone (effect can begin to wear off after 12 hours) Avoid HS insulin if taking qd steroids Caution when changing from IV to PO Can use qd N in AM

Helpful Tips Ensure you know what the patient is actually taking, not just what they were prescribed Review accuchecks early in the day BEFORE long acting insulins Include in your orders fixed time(s) to reassess sliding scales, accuchecks etc as a forced reminder Err on the side of higher glucose values, especially if you anticipate a short term admission (minimize risk of hypoglycemia, improve patient comfort) Unexpectedly high sugars may indicate occult infection

Pitfalls Not reviewing the actual glucose readings Continuing accuchecks qid despite being in target range Forgetting about IVs that continue unnecessarily Not reassessing sliding scales if NPO, vomiting etc Using metformin with IV contrast, especially cardiac caths Complications associated with Acute Kidney Injury Giving extra doses of short-acting insulin in between sliding scale

Discharge Planning In most situations, resume medications as prescribed at home Dietary counselling/pt education Consider modifying treatment if clear evidence of suboptimal baseline control (ideally in consultation with pt s primary care provider) May need to modify based on sequelae of hospitalization (e.g., new renal failure, new medications) Ensure safe and effective transition to pt s health care provider(s)

Key Messages Determine goals of therapy Be aware of co-morbities Safe and effective use of sliding scales

References Clinical Practice Guidelines from the Canadian Diabetes Association http://guidelines.diabetes.ca American Diabetes Association: Standards of Medical care in Diabetes 2016 http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/s uppl/2015/12/21/39.supplement_1.dc2/20 16-Standards-of-Care.pdf

QUESTIONS?

31

32