ObjectivesTo study the incidence of, and risk factors for, iatrogenic hypoglycaemia following GwI infusion in our institution.ContextHyperkalaemia is a life‐threatening biochemical abnormality. Glucose‐with‐insulin (GwI) infusions form standard management, but risk iatrogenic hypoglycaemia (glucose ≤ 3.9 mmol/L). Recently updated UK guidelines include an additional glucose infusion in patients with pretreatment capillary blood glucose (CBG) < 7.0 mmol/L.DesignRetrospective analysis of outcomes for GwI infusions prescribed for hyperkalaemia from 1 January to 28 February 2019, extracted from the Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust electronic platform (eRecord).Participants132 patients received 228 GwI infusions for hyperkalaemia.Main outcome measuresIncidence, severity and time to onset of hypoglycaemia.ResultsHypoglycaemia incidence was 11.8%. At least 1 hypoglycaemic episode occurred in 18.2% of patients with 6.8% having at least 1 episode of severe hypoglycaemia (< 3.0 mmol/L). Most episodes (77.8%) occurred within 3 h of treatment. Lower pretreatment CBG (5.9 mmol/L [4.1 mmol/L‐11.2 mmol/L], versus 7.6 mmol/L [3.7 mmol/L‐31.3 mmol/L], P = .000) was associated with hypoglycaemia risk. A diagnosis of type 2 diabetes and treatment for hyperkalaemia within the previous 24 h were negatively associated.ConclusionsWithin our inpatient population, around 1 in 8 GwI infusions delivered as treatment for hyperkalaemia resulted in iatrogenic hypoglycaemia. Higher pretreatment CBG and a diagnosis of type 2 diabetes were protective, irrespective of renal function. Our findings support the immediate change to current management, either with additional glucose infusions or by using glucose‐only infusions in patients without diabetes. These approaches should be compared via a prospective randomized study.
ObjectivesThe steroid hormone vitamin D has roles in immunomodulation and bone health. Insufficiency is associated with susceptibility to respiratory infections. We report 25-hydroxy vitamin D (25(OH)D) measurements in hospitalised people with COVID-19 and influenza A and in survivors of critical illness to test the hypotheses that vitamin D insufficiency scales with illness severity and persists in survivors.DesignCross-sectional study.Setting and participantsPlasma was obtained from 295 hospitalised people with COVID-19 (International Severe Acute Respiratory and emerging Infections Consortium (ISARIC)/WHO Clinical Characterization Protocol for Severe Emerging Infections UK study), 93 with influenza A (Mechanisms of Severe Acute Influenza Consortium (MOSAIC) study, during the 2009–2010 H1N1 pandemic) and 139 survivors of non-selected critical illness (prior to the COVID-19 pandemic). Total 25(OH)D was measured by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Free 25(OH)D was measured by ELISA in COVID-19 samples.Outcome measuresReceipt of invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) and in-hospital mortality.ResultsVitamin D insufficiency (total 25(OH)D 25–50 nmol/L) and deficiency (<25 nmol/L) were prevalent in COVID-19 (29.3% and 44.4%, respectively), influenza A (47.3% and 37.6%) and critical illness survivors (30.2% and 56.8%). In COVID-19 and influenza A, total 25(OH)D measured early in illness was lower in patients who received IMV (19.6 vs 31.9 nmol/L (p<0.0001) and 22.9 vs 31.1 nmol/L (p=0.0009), respectively). In COVID-19, biologically active free 25(OH)D correlated with total 25(OH)D and was lower in patients who received IMV, but was not associated with selected circulating inflammatory mediators.ConclusionsVitamin D deficiency/insufficiency was present in majority of hospitalised patients with COVID-19 or influenza A and correlated with severity and persisted in critical illness survivors at concentrations expected to disrupt bone metabolism. These findings support early supplementation trials to determine if insufficiency is causal in progression to severe disease, and investigation of longer-term bone health outcomes.
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