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Pediatric Critical Illness Hyperglycemia and Glycemic Control Registry

Indiana University logo

Indiana University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Hypoglycemia Hyperglycemia

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT01116674
IRB00045186
CIH Registry (Other Identifier)
R21DK081847 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The objective in this project is to assemble a consortium of pediatric critical care centers of varying size, acuity, and composition to evaluate our glycemic control protocol on at least 250 children with hyperglycemia in different critical care units.

***This Study is supported by an R21 Grant (MRR) from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK).

Full description

Many studies over the past decade have demonstrated that clinical outcomes can be improved in critically ill adults by aggressive management of hyperglycemic with insulin infusions (Van Den Berghe 2001, Van Den Berghe 2006, Krinsey 2004, Treggari 2008, Scalea, 2007, Lang 2007). Yet, in some of these studies and other recent trials (i.e. Glucontrol (Preiser, 2009) VISEP (Brunkhorst, 2008) and (NICE-SUGAR, 2009)), have highlighted the potential and real risks of glycemic control (namely iatrogenic hypoglycemia) and questioned how effectively glucose can be controlled in critical illness. One reason for the suboptimal glycemic control witnessed in some trials may be not rigorously refined and validated. Even as such, many medical oversight committees (including the Institutes of Healthcare Improvement, the American Diabetes Association, and Society of Critical Care Medicine, among others) continue to recommend regular and aggressive glycemic control in critically ill patients. Although not specifically included nor excluded from such recommendations, most pediatric intensivists have not incorporated glycemic control into regular practice primarily due to concerns of therapy induced hyperglycemia - although there are reports of protocols that appear to be effective at controlling BG levels with low rates of hypoglycemia (Preissig et al 2008, Verhoeven et al 2009).

Our group at Emory University and Children's' Healthcare of Atlanta has taken a progressive, yet methodical, approach to better understand the implications of hyperglycemia and its treatment in critically ill and injured children. Practitioners at our facility developed a pediatric-specific protocol to identify and treat hyperglycemia in critically ill children. We have instituted this approach as standard care in our facility and have experience with managing several hundred children with hyperglycemia. Our approach to glycemic management has very promising safety and efficacy profiles, even when compared to the most stringent and successful glycemic control protocols used in adults. We published the first experience in pediatric glycemic control in pediatric in 2008 (Preissig et al PCCM 2008) and have used our experience to identify specific risk factors for developing hypoglycemia (Preissig et al JPed, 2009).

The goal of this proposal is to assist our step-wise approach in investigating hyperglycemia in critically ill children by externally validating our glycemic control protocol via multi-center evaluation. In doing so, we will also be developing the infrastructure and a tested intervention that can be leveraged for future studies of hyperglycemia in pediatric critical illness, including a multi-center outcome trial. The specific hypothesis for this project is that our protocol is safe and efficient at identifying and managing hyperglycemia in critically ill or injured children in pediatric ICUs regardless of ICU size, acuity, model, staffing makeup, or clinical focus.

Enrollment

206 patients

Sex

All

Ages

1 day to 21 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Critically ill children requiring mechanical ventilation, vasopressor/inotropes, continuous renal replacement therapy or other criteria, will have glycemic screening initiated. (Such are the risk factors that have been demonstrated to assist in the identification of critically children who will develop hyperglycemia (Preissig et al., JPeds., 2009)
  • Admission to the pediatric medical/surgical or pediatric cardiac intensive care unit
  • Require mechanical ventilation (endotracheal or via tracheotomy) and/or vasopressors/inotropic infusions (including dopamine, dobutamine, norepinephrine, epinephrine, vasopressin, or milrinone)
  • Patient or family member available to discuss informed consent criteria and provide informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients with type I diabetes mellitus presenting to the ICU in diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA)
  • Preexisting conditions in which there is impaired glycogen stores or counter regulatory response (i.e. inborn error of metabolism, fulminant hepatic failure)

Trial design

206 participants in 1 patient group

Glycemic Control
Description:
Critically ill children at participating centers who require select vital organ support measure (i.e. mechanical ventilation, vasopressor, or continuous renal replacement therapy) will have routine blood glucose (BG) screening initiated (i.e. at least q 12 hours). If a patient has a BG reading of \> 140 mg/dL, a repeat BG will be obtained in 1-2 hours. If this second BG is \> 140 mg/dL the patient will be diagnosed with critical illness hyperglycemia and an insulin infusion will be started and BG will be maintained between 80-140 using a pediatric specific developed and tested algorithm.

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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