Intraoperative Insulin Administration at Cardiac Surgery for Diabetic Patients

NCT ID: NCT04824586

Last Updated: 2021-04-01

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

PHASE4

Total Enrollment

70 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2019-06-01

Study Completion Date

2020-01-30

Brief Summary

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The primary objective of the study was to explore which insulin-based regimen is better, infusion or bolus regimen, for intraoperative management of glucose level for the diabetic patient at cardiac surgery. Secondary objectives include: comparing the relative amounts of insulin needed during the operation and subsequent cost impact and comparing potassium levels between groups.

Ethical approval for the study was obtained from the Office for Research Ethics Committees at Hashemite University - Prince Hamza hospital.

This study was a parallel-group, randomized, controlled trial with 1:1 allocation ratio.

Participants: Adult diabetic patients, type 2, who were admitted to hospital for cardiac surgery.

The intervention: Both patients in the infusion or bolus group received their dose of insulin, fast-acting human insulin (Actrapid®) was used.

Setting: Patients were recruited at Prince Hamza hospital, Amman, Jordan. A tertiary care center specialized unit in cardiac surgery for diabetic patients.

Outcomes monitoring: It was monitored six times as follows: preoperative induction measure, then glucose post heparin, and after that for 2 hours, glucose levels were monitored every 30 minutes. Insulin quantities were recorded as well to be used in secondary outcomes analysis.

Randomization, allocation, and blinding During patient enrolment, concealed allocation to either infusion group or bolus group was guaranteed through the use of a closed envelope system prepared by an independent investigator. Block randomization with random block sizes, ensured allocation balance, and avoided selection bias by preventing allocation prediction. Researchers and physicians were blind to the block size sequence and randomization. Envelopes were unopened until completion of patient registration. Hospital staff who monitor glucose and those who administered insulin were blinded to the primary and secondary outcomes' measure.

Detailed Description

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The primary objective of the study was to explore which insulin-based regimen is better, infusion or bolus regimen, for intraoperative management of glucose level for the diabetic patient at cardiac surgery. Secondary objectives include: comparing the relative amounts of insulin needed during the operation and subsequent cost impact and comparing potassium levels between groups.

Ethical approval and study registration Ethical approval for the study was obtained from the Office for Research Ethics Committees at Hashemite University - Prince Hamza hospital with reference number 2/1/2019/2020.

Methods and Materials This study was a parallel-group, randomized, controlled trial with 1:1 allocation ratio.

Participants Adult diabetic patients, type 2, who were admitted to hospital for cardiac surgery. In addition to signing the consent form, patients were recruited when they met the following criteria: \>40 years old, patients who need the usual insulin according to insulin dosing guidelines, patients with pre-operation glucose level \> 200 mg/dL and \< 300 mg/dL.

The following patients were excluded: Insulin sensitive patents (Age \>70 years, Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR) \<45 ml/min, No history of Diabetes, Insulin resistance patients (Body Mass Index \> 35 kg/m2, total daily insulin dose \>80 units, Steroids \> 20 mg prednisone daily, patients who at high risk of complications and or (those whom their operation was differed to be supervised by a specialized team). Patients who were unable to give written informed consent, who had ≥4 emergency admissions during the six months prior to the index admission.

The intervention Both patients in the infusion or bolus group received their dose of insulin, fast-acting human insulin (Actrapid®) was used. The protocol of the insulin regimen and its related details were carried out according to the standard recommendations.

Setting Patients were recruited at Prince Hamza Hospital, Amman, Jordan. A tertiary care center specialized unit in cardiac surgery for diabetic patients.

Diabetic patients who had booked cardiac surgery and met the criteria were invited to the study. Patients who accepted participation and signed the consent were recruited by well-trained research assistance, who was trained on an ethical standard and patient-centered approach.

Primary and secondary outcomes In the present study, the primary outcome was the intraoperative level of glucose. It was monitored six times as follows: preoperative induction measure, then glucose post heparin, and after that for 2 hours, glucose levels were monitored every 30 minutes. Insulin quantities were recorded as well to be used in secondary outcomes analysis.

Sample size To detect a difference of at least 25mg/dL between infusion and bolus groups (the standard deviation of the two groups is expected to be 35 mg/dL, i.e., the variance is 1225 mg/dL), the study will need to recruit and record full data for at least 31 patients in each group. Providing that significant level of confidence 95% and the power of 80%.

n = (Zα/2+Zβ)2 \*2\*σ2 / d2. where Zα/2 is the critical value of the Normal distribution at α/2 (for a confidence level of 95%, α is 0.05, and the critical value is 1.96), Zβ is the critical value of the Normal distribution at β (for a power of 80%, β is 0.2, and the critical value is 0.84), σ2 is the population variance, and d is the difference needed to be detected.

Statistical methods Standard independent-samples t-test or separate variances t-test (Welch t-test) was used to compare the results between the two arms of the study. General Linear Model, one-way repeated measures ANOVA was conducted to determine whether there was a statistically significant difference within groups. Cost analysis and cost-effectiveness were used for the pharmacoeconomic analysis. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) was calculated as the cost of insulin in the Infusion protocol minus the cost of insulin in the bolus protocol divided by drop-in glucose level by infusion - drop in glucose level by bolus).

Randomization, allocation, and blinding During patient enrolment, concealed allocation to either infusion group or bolus group was guaranteed through the use of a closed envelope system prepared by an independent investigator. Block randomization with random block sizes, ensured allocation balance, and avoided selection bias by preventing allocation prediction. Researchers and physicians were blind to the block size sequence and randomization. Envelopes were unopened until completion of patient registration. Hospital staff who monitor glucose and those who administered insulin were blinded to the primary and secondary outcomes' measure.

Conditions

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Diabetes Mellitus Cardiac Event

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

This study was a parallel-group, randomized, controlled trial with 1:1 allocation ratio.
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

TRIPLE

Participants Caregivers Investigators

Study Groups

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Insulin infusion regimen

Adult type II diabetic patients, who were admitted to hospital for cardiac surgery. These group received their dose of insulin; Insulin infusion regimen.

Fast-acting human insulin (Actrapid®) was used in this group.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Fast-acting human insulin

Intervention Type DRUG

Both patients in the infusion or bolus group received their dose of insulin. The protocol of the insulin regimen and its related details were carried out according to the standard recommendations in a hospital where the trial done.

Insulin bolus regimen

Adult type II diabetic patients, who were admitted to hospital for cardiac surgery. These group received their dose of insulin; Insulin bolus regimen.

Fast-acting human insulin (Actrapid®) was used in this group.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Fast-acting human insulin

Intervention Type DRUG

Both patients in the infusion or bolus group received their dose of insulin. The protocol of the insulin regimen and its related details were carried out according to the standard recommendations in a hospital where the trial done.

Interventions

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Fast-acting human insulin

Both patients in the infusion or bolus group received their dose of insulin. The protocol of the insulin regimen and its related details were carried out according to the standard recommendations in a hospital where the trial done.

Intervention Type DRUG

Other Intervention Names

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Actrapid®

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Diabetic patients, type 2, who were admitted to hospital for cardiac surgery.
* Patient above 40 years old,
* Patients who need the usual insulin according to insulin dosing guidelines
* Patients with pre-operation glucose level \> 200 mg/dL and \< 300 mg/dL.

Exclusion Criteria

* Insulin sensitive patents (Age \>70 years, Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR) \<45 ml/min, No history of Diabetes, Insulin resistance patients (Body Mass Index \> 35 kg/m2, total daily insulin dose \>80 units, Steroids \> 20 mg prednisone daily, patients who at high risk of complications and or (those whom their operation was differed to be supervised by a specialized team).
* Patients who were unable to give written informed consent.
* Patients have ≥4 emergency admissions during the six months prior to the index admission.
Minimum Eligible Age

40 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

70 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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The Hashemite University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Mohanad Mousa Taha Odeh

Director of Pharmacy Management & Pharmaceutical Care Innovation Centrer

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Mohanad M Odeh, PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

The Hashemite University

Locations

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Prince Hamza Hospital

Amman, , Jordan

Site Status

Countries

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Jordan

Other Identifiers

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Intraoperative Insulin

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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