GLPwatch

Study protocol of a randomised controlled trial comparing perioperative intravenous insulin, GIK or GLP-1 treatment in diabetes-PILGRIM trial.

BMC Anesthesiol · 2014

Last updated 2026-05-28

This study compares three methods to control blood sugar during surgery in people with type 2 diabetes: a glucose-insulin-potassium infusion (GIK), insulin bolus injections (BR), and a GLP-1 drug called liraglutide (LG). The goal is to see which method keeps blood sugar levels most stable one hour after surgery, with 315 participants randomly assigned to one of the three groups.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalBMC Anesthesiol, 2014
Citations5
Relative citation ratio0.19
NIH percentile12
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Diabetes mellitus (DM) is associated with poor outcome after surgery. The prevalence of DM in hospitalised patients is up to 40%, meaning that the anaesthesiologist will encounter a patient with DM in the operating room on a daily basis. Despite an abundance of published glucose lowering protocols and the known negative outcomes associated with perioperative hyperglycaemia in DM, there is no evidence regarding the optimal intraoperative glucose lowering treatment. In addition, protocol adherence is usually low and protocol targets are not simply met. Recently, incretins have been introduced to lower blood glucose. The main hormone of the incretin system is glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1). GLP-1 increases insulin and decreases glucagon secretion in a glucose-dependent manner, resulting in glucose lowering action with a low incidence of hypoglycaemia. We set out to determine the optimal intraoperative treatment algorithm to lower glucose in patients with DM type 2 undergoing non-cardiac surgery, comparing intraoperative glucose-insulin-potassium infusion (GIK), insulin bolus regimen (BR) and GPL-1 (liragludite, LG) treatment. METHODS/DESIGN: This is a multicentre randomised open label trial in patients with DM type 2 undergoing non-cardiac surgery. Patients are randomly assigned to one of three study arms; intraoperative glucose-insulin-potassium infusion (GIK), intraoperative sliding-scale insulin boluses (BR) or GPL-1 pre-treatment with liraglutide (LG). Capillary glucose will be measured every hour. If necessary, in all study arms glucose will be adjusted with an intravenous bolus of insulin. Researchers, care givers and patients will not be blinded for the assigned treatment. The main outcome measure is the difference in median glucose between the three study arms at 1 hour postoperatively. We will include 315 patients, which gives us a 90% power to detect a 1 mmol l(-1) difference in glucose between the study arms. DISCUSSION: The PILGRIM trial started in January 2014 and will provide relevant information on the perioperative use of GLP-1 agonists and the optimal intraoperative treatment algorithm in patients with diabetes mellitus type 2. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02036372.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 25419179 ↗