Model-based glycemic control in a malaysian intensive care unit: Performance and safety study

Background: Stress-induced hyperglycemia is common in critically ill patients. A few forms of model-based glycemic control have been introduced to reduce this phenomena and among them is the automated STAR protocol which has been used in the Christchurch and Gyulá hospitals’ intensive care units (IC...

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Main Authors: Abu-Samah, A., Knopp, J.L., Razak, N.N.A., Razak, A.A., Jamaludin, U.K., Suhaimi, F.M., Ralib, A.M., Nor, M.B.M., Chase, J.G., Pretty, C.G.
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Language:English
Published: 2020
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spelling my.uniten.dspace-132382020-07-03T04:11:29Z Model-based glycemic control in a malaysian intensive care unit: Performance and safety study Abu-Samah, A. Knopp, J.L. Razak, N.N.A. Razak, A.A. Jamaludin, U.K. Suhaimi, F.M. Ralib, A.M. Nor, M.B.M. Chase, J.G. Pretty, C.G. Background: Stress-induced hyperglycemia is common in critically ill patients. A few forms of model-based glycemic control have been introduced to reduce this phenomena and among them is the automated STAR protocol which has been used in the Christchurch and Gyulá hospitals’ intensive care units (ICUs) since 2010. Methods: This article presents the pilot trial assessment of STAR protocol which has been implemented in the International Islamic University Malaysia Medical Centre (IIUMMC) Hospital ICU since December 2017. One hundred and forty-two patients who received STAR treatment for more than 20 hours were used in the assessment. The initial results are presented to discuss the ability to adopt and adapt the model-based control framework in a Malaysian environment by analyzing its performance and safety. Results: Overall, 60.7% of blood glucose measurements were in the target band. Only 0.78% and 0.02% of cohort measurements were below 4.0 mmol/L and 2.2 mmol/L (the limitsfor mild and severe hypoglycemia, respectively). Treatment preference-wise, the clinical staff were favorable of longer intervention options when available. However, 1 hourly treatments were still used in 73.7% of cases. Conclusion: The protocol succeeded in achieving patient-specific glycemic control while maintaining safety and was trusted by nurses to reduce workload. Its lower performance results, however, give the indication for modification in some of the control settings to better fit the Malaysian environment. © 2019 Abu-Samah et al. 2020-02-03T03:31:16Z 2020-02-03T03:31:16Z 2019 Article 10.2147/MDER.S187840 en
institution Universiti Tenaga Nasional
building UNITEN Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Tenaga Nasional
content_source UNITEN Institutional Repository
url_provider http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/
language English
description Background: Stress-induced hyperglycemia is common in critically ill patients. A few forms of model-based glycemic control have been introduced to reduce this phenomena and among them is the automated STAR protocol which has been used in the Christchurch and Gyulá hospitals’ intensive care units (ICUs) since 2010. Methods: This article presents the pilot trial assessment of STAR protocol which has been implemented in the International Islamic University Malaysia Medical Centre (IIUMMC) Hospital ICU since December 2017. One hundred and forty-two patients who received STAR treatment for more than 20 hours were used in the assessment. The initial results are presented to discuss the ability to adopt and adapt the model-based control framework in a Malaysian environment by analyzing its performance and safety. Results: Overall, 60.7% of blood glucose measurements were in the target band. Only 0.78% and 0.02% of cohort measurements were below 4.0 mmol/L and 2.2 mmol/L (the limitsfor mild and severe hypoglycemia, respectively). Treatment preference-wise, the clinical staff were favorable of longer intervention options when available. However, 1 hourly treatments were still used in 73.7% of cases. Conclusion: The protocol succeeded in achieving patient-specific glycemic control while maintaining safety and was trusted by nurses to reduce workload. Its lower performance results, however, give the indication for modification in some of the control settings to better fit the Malaysian environment. © 2019 Abu-Samah et al.
format Article
author Abu-Samah, A.
Knopp, J.L.
Razak, N.N.A.
Razak, A.A.
Jamaludin, U.K.
Suhaimi, F.M.
Ralib, A.M.
Nor, M.B.M.
Chase, J.G.
Pretty, C.G.
spellingShingle Abu-Samah, A.
Knopp, J.L.
Razak, N.N.A.
Razak, A.A.
Jamaludin, U.K.
Suhaimi, F.M.
Ralib, A.M.
Nor, M.B.M.
Chase, J.G.
Pretty, C.G.
Model-based glycemic control in a malaysian intensive care unit: Performance and safety study
author_facet Abu-Samah, A.
Knopp, J.L.
Razak, N.N.A.
Razak, A.A.
Jamaludin, U.K.
Suhaimi, F.M.
Ralib, A.M.
Nor, M.B.M.
Chase, J.G.
Pretty, C.G.
author_sort Abu-Samah, A.
title Model-based glycemic control in a malaysian intensive care unit: Performance and safety study
title_short Model-based glycemic control in a malaysian intensive care unit: Performance and safety study
title_full Model-based glycemic control in a malaysian intensive care unit: Performance and safety study
title_fullStr Model-based glycemic control in a malaysian intensive care unit: Performance and safety study
title_full_unstemmed Model-based glycemic control in a malaysian intensive care unit: Performance and safety study
title_sort model-based glycemic control in a malaysian intensive care unit: performance and safety study
publishDate 2020
_version_ 1672614217405956096