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(Circulation. 2008;117:1610-1619.)
© 2008 American Heart Association, Inc.
AHA Scientific Statement |
| Abstract |
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Key Words: AHA Scientific Statement hyperglycemia diabetes mellitus acute coronary syndrome prognosis
| Introduction |
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| Relationship Between Admission Glucose Level and Outcomes in ACS Patients With and Without Preexisting Diabetes Mellitus |
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110 mg/dL was 3.9 compared with nondiabetic AMI patients who were normoglycemic. Among AMI patients with diabetes, those with admission glucose
180 mg/dL had a 70% relative increase in the risk of in-hospital death compared with diabetic patients with normal admission glucose values. Similarly, Foo et al4 demonstrated a near-linear relationship between higher admission glucose levels and higher rates of left ventricular failure and cardiac death among 2127 patients with ACS. Meier et al25 showed higher long-term mortality rates and larger infarct size (measured by creatine kinase and MB-fraction levels) among hyperglycemic AMI patients both with and without diabetes. Studies by Wahab et al14 and Stranders et al20 have also suggested that the admission hyperglycemia-associated risk is the highest in AMI patients without previously known diabetes. The Cooperative Cardiovascular Project, the largest retrospective study of this subject to date, which examined the outcomes of 141 680 elderly AMI patients, demonstrated a significant 13% to 77% relative increase in 30-day mortality and a 7% to 46% relative increase in 1-year mortality depending on the degree of hyperglycemia (Figure 1).1 This higher risk of both short- and long-term mortality persisted after controlling for higher burden of comorbidities (such as prior AMI and heart failure) and greater disease severity (higher Killip class, higher peak creatine kinase and creatinine levels, and lower ejection fraction) observed in patients with elevated glucose levels. Importantly, the glucose-associated risk of increased mortality was not restricted to patients with preexisting diabetes. As can be seen in Figure 2, higher glucose levels were associated with a significantly greater increase in the risk of 30-day mortality in patients who did not have recognized diabetes than in those with established diabetes. In fact, in patients without known diabetes, the risk of 30-day mortality started to rise once admission glucose exceeded 110 mg/dL, whereas the threshold was higher among diabetic patients.
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Data from several randomized clinical trials also confirm a powerful association between higher glucose levels and death in ACS populations. In the Clinical Trial of Reviparin and Metabolic Modulation in Acute Myocardial Infarction Treatment and Evaluation–Estudios Clínicos Latino America (CREATE-ECLA), which evaluated patients with ST-elevation AMI, the 30-day mortality rate was 6.6% among control group patients with baseline glucose in the lowest tertile, whereas those in the highest glucose tertile experienced a mortality rate of 14%.26 In the Hyperglycemia: Intensive Insulin Infusion in Infarction (HI-5) study, the 6-month mortality rate was significantly higher among AMI patients with mean 24-hour glucose levels
144 mg/dL.27
| Relationship Between Persistent Hyperglycemia During Hospitalization for ACS and Mortality |
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These studies used glucose values that were based on a single measurement after hospital admission and thus were not indicative of overall hyperglycemia throughout the hospitalization. No prior study has used multiple glucose values obtained in a real-world clinical setting to define the prognostic value of persistently elevated glucose during the entire ACS hospitalization.
| Physiological Link Between Elevated Glucose and Adverse Outcomes in Patients With ACS: Is Hyperglycemia a Marker of High Risk or a Mediator of Adverse Outcomes? |
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In diabetic patients, postprandial hyperglycemia is associated with development of myocardial perfusion defects due to microvascular dysfunction, a condition that improves with better glucose control.34,35 Hyperglycemic patients with ST-elevation AMI have lower rates of spontaneous reperfusion.36 Microvascular dysfunction was also demonstrated in hyperglycemic patients with AMI undergoing reperfusion. Specifically, Iwakura et al5 showed a higher incidence of the no reflow phenomenon by myocardial contrast echocardiography in patients with elevated glucose levels after successful reperfusion. Human studies have also linked elevated glucose levels with endothelial dysfunction, as measured by endothelium-mediated brachial artery vasodilation,37 in which the level of endothelial dysfunction was correlated with the level of hyperglycemia.
Several studies have shown that hyperglycemia is associated with a prothrombotic state. Acutely hyperglycemic rats exhibit lower tissue plasminogen activator activity and higher plasminogen activator inhibitor levels.38 Hyperglycemic but not euglycemic clamp conditions in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus were found to be associated with increased platelet aggregation and higher thromboxane A2 and von Willebrand factor activity.39 Acute hyperglycemia induces a shortening of the half-life of fibrinogen and platelet aggregation and results in increased levels of fibrinopeptide A, prothrombin fragments, and factor VII, all phenomena that suggest increased activation of prothrombotic factors.40–44
Higher glucose levels have also been shown to be associated with increased markers of vascular inflammation. Both in vitro and in vivo studies have linked hyperglycemia with elevated levels of C-reactive protein, interleukin-6, and tumor necrosis factor-
.45,46 Tumor necrosis factor-
has been shown to extend infarct size in laboratory animals and to induce myocardiocyte apoptosis.47,48 In vitro and in vivo studies also demonstrated induction of the proinflammatory transcription factor nuclear factor-
B in a setting of elevated glucose.49,50 Glucose ingestion in healthy human volunteers is also associated with increased production of other proinflammatory factors, such as activator protein 1 and early growth response 1, and increased expression of the genes regulated by them, including the genes for matrix metalloproteinases-2 (MMP-2) and -9 (MMP-9) and tissue factor (TF).51 Hyperglycemia has also been shown to be associated with increased generation of reactive oxygen species, which can induce tissue injury.52,53 Interestingly, recent data from human studies suggest that acute fluctuations in glucose levels may have an even more powerful impact on oxidative stress than chronic, sustained hyperglycemia.54
Higher glucose levels in patients with ACS have also been associated with higher free fatty acid concentrations, insulin resistance, and impaired myocardial glucose utilization, thus increasing the consumption of oxygen and potentially worsening ischemia.55,56 Higher free fatty acid concentrations have been linked to increased incidence of malignant ventricular arrhythmias.55,56 Finally, hyperglycemia has been linked to an impaired immune response.57 Figure 3 summarizes the detrimental effects of glucose on cardiovascular and other organ systems.
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Given the multiple detrimental effects of elevated levels of glucose on the cardiovascular system, it is possible that poor glucose control during hospitalization may have a direct effect on outcomes in patients hospitalized with ACS. As demonstrated by several investigators, insulin-mediated normoglycemia may attenuate some of the detrimental effects of elevated glucose; specifically, it may have antiinflammatory effects (such as reducing C-reactive protein levels) in both AMI and post-coronary artery bypass grafting patients.58–61 Insulin may also inhibit generation of reactive oxygen species, may have profibrinolytic and antiapoptotic effects,58,62–65 and may improve myocardial blood flow.66 Whether the possible beneficial effects of glucose control in the setting of ACS could be attributed primarily to glucose normalization, insulin administration, or both remains debatable; however, the preponderance of evidence suggests that insulin therapy alone, without achievement of normoglycemia, does not improve outcomes. Whether insulin-mediated normoglycemia will improve survival and reduce complications in patients with ACS remains to be established.
The differential impact of hyperglycemia on outcomes in patients with and without known diabetes has been a consistent finding by several investigators. Specifically, elevated glucose appears to be a much stronger predictor of adverse events in patients without previously recognized diabetes than in those with established diabetes. Although the specific pathophysiological mechanisms behind this phenomenon are not well understood, several potential explanations exist. Some hyperglycemic patients without known diabetes (particularly those with severe hyperglycemia) likely have diabetes that was neither appropriately recognized nor treated before hospitalization; these patients may, therefore, represent a higher-risk cohort. Furthermore, hyperglycemic AMI patients without known diabetes are much less likely to be treated with insulin than those with diabetes, even when glucose levels are markedly elevated. Given the possible beneficial effects of insulin in a setting of myocardial ischemia, this therapeutic difference may account in part for the disparity in outcomes. Finally, it is also possible that a higher degree of stress (or severity of illness) is required to produce a similar degree of hyperglycemia in patients without known diabetes than in those with diabetes. A better understanding of this important interaction between hyperglycemia, the presence of diabetes, and adverse outcomes is needed and should be the subject of further research.
| Metrics of Glucose Control During Hospitalization and Their Prognostic Association With Outcomes in ACS |
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Another dimension of measuring glucose in the inpatient setting deserves brief mention. Some prior epidemiological studies and randomized clinical trials have used plasma glucose, whereas others used whole-blood glucose measurements. These are not identical; in fact, plasma glucose is
10% higher than whole-blood glucose. Care should be taken to account for this difference when the results of prior studies are interpreted and applied in clinical care.
New technologies, such as continuous glucose monitors, are currently emerging that may simplify the task of multiple glucose measurements in the inpatient setting; however, there are currently no data on the use of these technologies in patients hospitalized with ACS. Whether these devices will have a role in future management of hyperglycemic ACS is therefore unclear.
| Relationship Between Intensive Insulin Therapy, Glucose Control, and Outcomes in Hyperglycemic Patients With ACS and in Other Critically Ill Patient Populations |
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The DIGAMI-2 trial74 attempted to study 3 alternative treatment regimens: acute insulin-glucose infusion followed by insulin-based long-term glucose control; insulin-glucose infusion followed by standard glucose control on discharge; and routine metabolic management in both inpatient and outpatient settings. Although there were no differences in outcomes among the 1253 randomized AMI patients, this may be attributable to the similar short-term glucose control and identical longer-term glucose control obtained among the 3 groups. Most importantly, the longer-term fasting glucose target of 90 to 126 mg/dL was never achieved in the intensive-treatment group. Thus, despite its intent, DIGAMI-2 ended up comparing different insulin-treatment strategies, not different intensities of glucose control. Furthermore, like the original DIGAMI trial, DIGAMI-2 did not include any hyperglycemic patients without previously known diabetes, the group with the highest risk of glucose-associated death.
The HI-5 study attempted to rectify some of the issues that were encountered in DIGAMI-2.27 It was the first randomized clinical trial of intensive insulin infusion that included hyperglycemic AMI patients without previously established diabetes. Patients assigned to the intensive insulin-infusion arm received standard insulin and dextrose infusion that was then adjusted to maintain glucose levels between 72 and 180 mg/dL. Patients in the conventional arm received their baseline diabetes medications (including subcutaneous insulin); additional short-acting subcutaneous insulin was permitted for those with a glucose level >288 mg/dL. There were only 244 patients randomized in the study. There was no difference in mortality rates among the groups during hospitalization or at 3 or 6 months. There were, however, statistically and clinically significant reductions in post–myocardial infarction heart failure during hospitalization (10% absolute risk reduction) and in reinfarction at 3 months (3.7% absolute risk reduction).
There are several very important issues that need to be considered in the interpretation of this study. First and most importantly, the HI-5 study suffered from the same issues that complicated the DIGAMI-2 trial. Specifically, the mean 24-hour glucose values were similar in the intensive-treatment arm (141 mg/dL) and the conservative-treatment arm (153 mg/dL, P=NS). Thus, as with the DIGAMI-2 study, the HI-5 investigators ended up comparing 2 different insulin strategies but not 2 different intensities of glucose control. In addition, no provisions for tight glucose control were made after the initial 24 hours of hospitalization, and the study never recruited the intended number of patients (244 patients recruited instead of the 850 patients planned for on the basis of the power calculations).
CREATE-ECLA, a multinational, randomized clinical trial, compared the impact of glucose-insulin-potassium (GIK) infusion and placebo on mortality in 20 201 AMI patients.26 From the outset, CREATE-ECLA was not designed to be a study of intensive glucose control in AMI. There was no requirement for admission hyperglycemia for study entry, and patients with both normal and elevated glucose levels on admission were included. Unlike DIGAMI-1 and -2, glucose control was not the primary intervention target. There were also no prespecified targets for glucose control with GIK infusion, and in fact, posttreatment glucose levels (24 hours after randomization) were higher in the GIK group (155 mg/dL) than in controls (135 mg/dL). There were no differences in rates of 30-day mortality, cardiac arrest, cardiogenic shock, or reinfarction between the GIK and placebo groups.
However, studies in other critically ill patient populations show that successful strict glucose control, regardless of diabetes status, may result in better outcomes. Specifically, a landmark study by van den Berghe and colleagues75 has demonstrated that target-driven glucose control with intensive insulin therapy (goal of whole-blood glucose level of 80 to 110 mg/dL) reduced intensive care unit (ICU) mortality rates from 8.0% to 4.6% in surgical patients and in-hospital mortality rates from 10.9% to 7.2%. This improvement was entirely attributable to the decrease in the mortality rate seen in patients who remained in the ICU for >5 days. The relative risks of ICU complications, such as renal failure, septicemia, and transfusion requirements, were also markedly reduced by 41% to 50%. Importantly, the benefit was achieved with few adverse events (such as hypoglycemia). The findings from this study clearly suggest that control of hyperglycemia may be more critical than the dose of insulin administered. In a recent follow-up study by the same group, which involved medical ICU patients, intensive glucose control reduced morbidity but not mortality in the intention-to-treat analysis; however, the mortality rate was lower in the intervention arm among those patients who required ICU care for
3 days.76 Analysis of pooled data from both surgical and medical ICU studies by van den Berghe and colleagues77 demonstrated that intensive glucose control in the intention-to-treat analysis was associated with significant reductions in mortality (24% relative risk reduction) and morbidity (42% relative risk reduction in kidney injury); patients who achieved mean whole-blood glucose levels <110 mg/dL had the lowest mortality and complication rates but also had the highest rate of hypoglycemia (10.7%). The mortality and morbidity benefit of intensive glucose control, once again, was not seen in the subgroup of patients who stayed in the ICU <3 days. Interestingly, the benefit of intensive glucose control was also not observed among patients with established diabetes, which again suggests that the relationship between glucose control and outcomes may be very different in patients with and without preexisting diabetes.
Because of significant differences in patient populations, the results of these studies by van den Berghe et al can not simply be extrapolated to patients with ACS, particularly because many patients with ACS have ICU stays shorter than 3 days. Whether strict glucose control in hyperglycemic patients with ACS will result in similar reductions in mortality and in-hospital complications remains to be established and needs to be investigated in well-designed randomized clinical trials.
| Current Patterns of Glucose Management During ACS Hospitalization |
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| Prognostic Value of Hypoglycemia |
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| Executive Summary |
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The lack of specific direction in regard to glucose management in ACS patients stems from methodological limitations of prior studies and the lack of convincing data from randomized trials to establish the benefit of tight glucose control in this patient population. Because of these limitations, multiple critical knowledge gaps currently exist in our understanding of the relationship between elevated glucose and adverse outcomes in ACS patients.
| Areas in Need of Further Investigation |
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Although many of these questions can be answered by observational studies, randomized multicenter clinical trials will be needed to definitively establish whether intensive glucose control will reduce the associated increased mortality rate and higher rates of complications in hospitalized ACS patients with hyperglycemia. Ideally, these trials should:
Recommendations
Until the above-mentioned knowledge gaps have been addressed appropriately, specific, evidence-based recommendations will be difficult to make with regard to the diagnosis and management of hyperglycemia during ACS hospitalization. The following set of recommendations should therefore be viewed by clinicians only as a general reference. There is currently insufficient evidence to consider glucose control as a quality measure during ACS hospitalization, although this position may change in the future.
| Summary |
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| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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This statement was approved by the American Heart Association Science Advisory and Coordinating Committee on November 28, 2007. A single reprint is available by calling 800-242-8721 (US only) or by writing the American Heart Association, Public Information, 7272 Greenville Ave, Dallas, TX 75231-4596. Ask for reprint No. 71-0437. To purchase additional reprints, please call 843-216-2533 or e-mail kelle.ramsay@wolterskluwer.com.
Expert peer review of AHA Scientific Statements is conducted at the AHA National Center. For more on AHA statements and guidelines development, visit http://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=3023366.
Permissions: Multiple copies, modification, alteration, enhancement, and/or distribution of this document are not permitted without the express permission of the American Heart Association. Instructions for obtaining permission are located at http://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml? identifier=4431. A link to the "Permission Request Form" appears on the right side of the page.
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