Experts Suggest All Hospitalized Patients Have Blood Glucose Levels Tested

Main Category: Diabetes
Also Included In: Endocrinology
Article Date: 09 Jan 2012 - 0:00 PST

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Hyperglycemia, or having high glucose levels in the blood, is a common, serious and costly health care problem in hospitalized patients. Today, The Endocrine Society released a clinical practice guideline (CPG) providing recommendations for practical and safe glycemic targets and describing protocols and system improvements required to achieve glycemic goals for hospitalized patients in a non-critical care setting.

Hyperglycemia is associated with increased risk of health complications and mortality, and can be found even in non-diabetic hospitalized patients. Observational studies report that hyperglycemia is present in 32 to 38 percent of patients in community hospitals. Improvement in glycemic control results in lower rates of hospital complications in general medicine and surgery patients. The new CPG suggests that all patients, independent of a prior diagnosis of diabetes, have their blood glucose levels tested upon admission to a hospital.

"Hyperglycemia is associated with prolonged hospital stay, increased incidence of infections and death in non-critically ill hospitalized patients," said Guillermo Umpierrez, MD, of Emory University in Atlanta, Ga. and chair of the task force that authored the CPG. "This new guideline contains consensus recommendations from experts in the field for the management of hyperglycemia in hospitalized patients in non-critical care settings."

Specific recommendations from the Society's CPG include: The Hormone Foundation, the patient education affiliate of The Endocrine Society, has published a companion patient guide to this CPG. The patient guide, which can be found online, explains the causes and impact of hyperglycemia and discusses treatment options.

Other members of The Endocrine Society task force that developed this CPG include: Richard Hellman and Mikhail Kosiborod of the University of Missouri-Kansas City; Mary Korytkowski of the University of Pittsburgh in Penn.; Gregory Maynard of the University of California San Diego Medical Center; Victor Montori of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.; Jane Seley of New York Presbyterian Hospital in N.Y.; and Greet Van den Berghe of the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium.

The Society established the Clinical Practice Guideline (CPG) Program to provide endocrinologists and other clinicians with evidence-based recommendations in the diagnosis and treatment of endocrine-related conditions. Each CPG is created by a task force of topic-related experts in the field. Task forces rely on scientific reviews of the literature in the development of CPG recommendations. The Endocrine Society does not solicit or accept corporate support for its CPGs. All CPGs are supported entirely by Society funds.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
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"Management of Hyperglycemia in Hospitalized Patients in Non-Critical Care Setting: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline," is published in the February 2012 issue of the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism (JCEM), a publication of The Endocrine Society.

The Endocrine Society
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