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High Frequency of Severe Hyperglycemia Observed During Intensive Hematologic Care: A Prospective Study Using Continuous Glucose Monitoring

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posted on 2024-12-10, 16:07 authored by Marieke Tienstra, Janneke W de Boer, Jaap A van Doesum, Kylie Keijzer, Linde M Morsink, Carin LE Hazenberg, Emanuele Ammatuna, Gerwin A Huls, Pratik Choudhary, Rijk OB Gans, Valerie R Wiersma, Tom van Meerten, Peter R van Dijk
Objective: During intensive hematologic care, patients are exposed to high-dose chemotherapy, corticosteroids, immunosuppressants, and total parenteral nutrition. Combined with physiologic stress and increased release of cytokines and hormones, this can lead to dysglycemia, which is associated with adverse clinical outcomes. This prospective study aimed to investigate continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) to identify dysglycemia during intensive hematologic care. Methods: Patients receiving chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy or allogeneic or autologous stem cell transplantation were eligible. Throughout the study, glucose levels were concurrently monitored using CGM and point-of-care (POC) glucose measurements in 60 patients (71% male, median age of 64 [interquartile range, 58-68] years, and 10% with diabetes). Results: Hyperglycemia (glucose level, >10 mmol/L) was prevalent in 93% of patients, of whom 90% had no history of diabetes. Severe hyperglycemia (glucose level, >13.1 mmol/L) was present in 38%. Additionally, hyperglycemia was associated with prolonged hospitalization in patients undergoing chimeric antigen receptor T-cell treatment (β, 0.19; 95% CI, 0.04-0.35) and autologous stem cell transplantation (β, 0.16; 95% CI, 0.01-0.32). CGM outperformed POC in detecting hyperglycemia (>10 mmol/L: 1060 vs 124, detected 2.8 [interquartile range, 0.7-4.0]) hours earlier. The mean absolute relative difference between CGM and POC was 21.5%, with 99.8% of measurements in the clinical acceptable zone A + B of the Clarke error grid. Conclusion: These findings emphasize the potential and importance of glucose monitoring with CGM for improved and earlier detection of hyperglycemia, in this patient population, which seems feasible. Our results suggest a need for further studies into CGM as method to optimize glucose levels, which could improve outcomes in patients receiving intensive hematologic care.

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Population Health Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Endocrine Practice

Volume

30

Issue

12

Pagination

1141-1148

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

1530-891X

eissn

1934-2403

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-12-09

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Pratik Choudhary

Deposit date

2024-11-07

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