Abstract
Severely burned patients benefit from intensive insulin therapy (IIT) for tight glycemic control (TGC). The authors evaluated the clinical impact of automatic correction of hematocrit and ascorbic acid interference for bedside glucose monitoring performance in critically ill burn patients. The performance of two point-of-care glucose monitoring systems (GMSs): 1) GMS1, an autocorrecting device, and 2) GMS2, a noncorrecting device were compared. Sixty remnant arterial blood samples were collected in a prospective observational study to evaluate hematocrit and ascorbic acid effects on GMS1 vs GMS2 accuracy paired against a plasma glucose reference. Next, we enrolled 12 patients in a pilot randomized controlled trial. Patients were randomized 1:1 to receive IIT targeting a TGC interval of 111 to 151 mg/dl and guided by either GMS1 or GMS2. GMS bias, mean insulin rate, and glycemic variability were calculated. In the prospective study, GMS1 results were similar to plasma glucose results (mean bias, -0.75 [4.0] mg/dl; n = 60; P =.214). GMS2 results significantly differed from paired plasma glucose results (mean bias, -5.66 [18.7] mg/dl; n = 60; P =.048). Ascorbic acid therapy elicited significant GMS2 performance bias (29.2 [27.2]; P
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Tran, N. K., Godwin, Z. R., Bockhold, J. C., Passerini, A. G., Cheng, J., & Ingemason, M. (2014). Clinical impact of sample interference on intensive insulin therapy in severely burned patients: A pilot study. Journal of Burn Care and Research, 35(1), 72–79. https://doi.org/10.1097/BCR.0b013e31829b3700
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.