Tight blood sugar control for pediatric cardiac surgery patients does not improve outcomes

Tight blood sugar control in the intensive care unit for pediatric cardiac surgery patients does not improve patients’ infection rate, mortality, length of stay or organ failure when compared to standard care, new research shows.

The research, conducted at the University of Michigan’s C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital and Boston Children’s Hospital, will be published Online First in the New England Journal of Medicine Sept. 7.

“Post-operative complications for infants and young children who have cardiac surgery remains common, so we want to identify risk factors that we can modify and interventions to help speed their recovery,” says Michael G. Gaies, M.D., M.P.H., a physician in the Cardiac Intensive Care Unit at C.S. Mott, and senior author of the study.

“Tight glycemic control using insulin was shown, in some studies, to improve outcomes in adult cardiac surgery patients, but we didn’t know whether children would experience similar benefits.”

The researchers studied 980 children from newborn to three years old who were undergoing surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass, representing the largest clinical trial ever performed in pediatric cardiac surgical patients. Patients either received standard cardiac intensive care or tight glycemic control using insulin to target blood glucose at a normal level.

“We found no benefits of tight glycemic control, but the reasons are unclear,” says Gaies.

Gaies says that routine control of blood sugar levels in pediatric cardiac intensive care units has been controversial because of the contradictory results in adult patients and also concerns about the effects of insulin-induced hypoglycemia on the developing brain.

“This study seems to indicate that tight glycemic control should not be standard practice in pediatric intensive care units for children who have had cardiac surgery,” says Gaies. “We will continue investigating new approaches to improve both short-term recovery and longer-term outcomes for children who need cardiac surgery.”
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Journal citation: doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1206044

Funding: National Institutes of Health, R01HL088448; National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute; American Recovery and Reinvestment Act Supplement and the Harvard Catalyst Clinical and Translational Research Center.

Additional authors: From the University of Michigan: John R. Charpie, M.D., Ph.D. and Richard G. Ohye, M.D.; From Boston Children’s Hospital: Michael S.D. Agus, M.D., Garry M. Steil, Ph.D., David Wypij, Ph.D., John M. Costello, M.D., M.P.H., Peter C. Laussen, M.B.B.S., Jamin L. Alexander, B.A., Lisa A. Scoppettuolo, M.S., and Frank A. Pigula, M.D.; From Maine Medical Center and Tufts University School of Medicine: Monica Langer, M.D.

About the University of Michigan Health System:

The University of Michigan C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital is consistently ranked as one of the best hospitals in the country. It was nationally ranked in all ten pediatric specialties in the U.S. News Media Group’s 2012 edition of “America’s Best Children’s Hospitals” including fourth in the country for heart and heart surgery.

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Mary F. Masson
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734-764-2220
University of Michigan Health System

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