ICU Management & Practice, ICU Volume 12 - Issue 3 - Autumn 2012
Non-diabetic patients who have elevated serum glucose levels when they are admitted to the hospital presenting community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) have an increased risk of dying within 90 days compared with normoglycemic patients with the same illness, suggest studies presented at the European Respiratory Society (ERS) 2012 Annual Congress in Vienna, Austria, on 2 September.
High serum glucose levels predispose people to CAP by increasing the
risk for aspiration, decreasing immunity, and causing impaired lung function, a
Community Acquired Pneumonia Competence Network (CAPNETZ) study has found.
The study, headed by Dr. Philipp M. Lepper from the University
Hospital of Saarland in Homburg, Germany, evaluated whether acute dysglycaemia
could predict a poor outcome in patients with CAP who had not been diagnosed
with diabetes.
"Increased serum glucose
levels at admission is a risk factor for death among patients with
community-acquired pneumonia. The risk for mortality starts to increase when
serum glucose levels are slightly increased but remain below the defined
threshold for overt diabetes," Dr. Lepper explained.
The study used data from 6,891
adults with CAP who were enrolled in the prospective CAPNETZ study from 2003 to
2009. Uniand multivariable hazard ratios (HR) were adjusted for sex, age, body
mass index, current smoking status, and CRB-65 (new onset of confusion;
respiratory rate of 30 breaths/min or greater; systolic blood pressure of 90 mm
Hg or less, or diastolic blood pressure of 60 mm Hg or less; and aged 65 years
or older). CRB-65 is a clinical prediction rule that grades the severity of CAP
in terms of 30- day mortality.
On multivariate analysis, it was
determined that an elevated glucose level at hospital admission was an
independent predictor of 28-, 90-, and 180-day mortality in CAP patients. In
fact, increasing glucose levels corresponded to increasing risk for death from
CAP. The study did not establish a causal relation between glucose levels and
increased mortality risk in patients with CAP.
At the time of hospital admission, patients who had glucose levels from
6 to 11 mmol/l were considered to have mild acute hyperglycaemia and patients
who had glucose levels of 14 mmol/l or more were considered to have acute
hyperglycaemia. In all, 40% of CAP patients presented with hyperglycaemia. The
majority (62%) of the patients were male, and average age was 60 years.
Patients with mild to moderate hyperglycaemia had a significantly
higher HR for mortality at 90 days (1.55; 95% confidence interval: 1.18–2.04;
P<.001) than patients with normal glucose levels at hospital admission. In
patients presenting with acute hyperglycaemia, the HR increased to 6.04 (95% confidence
interval: 4.18–8.74; P<.001). "CAPNETZ is the largest trial to look at
hyperglycemia as an independent risk factor for increased risk of death from
pneumonia," said Dr. Lepper.
The
CAPNETZ study was funded by the German Ministry of Education and Research,
BundesministeriumfürBildung und Forschung.