Peri-operative management of patients with type-2 diabetes mellitus undergoing non-cardiac surgery using liraglutide, glucose-insulin-potassium infusion or intravenous insulin bolus regimens: a randomised controlled trial.
Anaesthesia · 2018
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of 150 adults with type 2 diabetes undergoing non-cardiac surgery, three different treatments were compared: liraglutide, a glucose-insulin-potassium infusion, and insulin bolus injections. One hour after surgery, patients given liraglutide had lower blood sugar levels (6.6 mmol/L) than those given the infusion (7.5 mmol/L) or insulin bolus (7.6 mmol/L). Nausea before surgery was more common with liraglutide, affecting six patients, including two with severe nausea.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Anaesthesia, 2018 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 48 |
| Relative citation ratio | 2.33 |
| NIH percentile | 78 |
| Molecules | liraglutide |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
In this open-label multicentre randomised controlled trial, we investigated three peri-operative treatment strategies to lower glucose and reduce the need for rescue insulin in patients aged 18-75 years with type-2 diabetes mellitus undergoing non-cardiac surgery. Patients were randomly allocated using a web-based randomisation program to premedication with liraglutide (liraglutide group), glucose-insulin-potassium infusion (insulin infusion group) or insulin bolus regimen (insulin bolus group), targeting a glucose < 8.0 mmol.l . The primary outcome was the between group difference in median glucose levels 1 h after surgery. We analysed 150 patients (liraglutide group n = 44, insulin infusion group n = 53, insulin bolus group n = 53) according to the intention-to-treat principle. Median (IQR [range]) plasma glucose 1 h postoperatively was lower in the liraglutide group compared with the insulin infusion and insulin bolus groups (6.6 (5.6-7.7 [4.2-13.5]) mmol.l vs. 7.5 (6.4-8.3 [3.9-16.6]) mmol.l (p = 0.026) and 7.6 (6.4-8.9 [4.7-13.2]) mmol.l ) p = 0.006, respectively). The incidence of hypoglycaemia and postoperative complications did not differ between the groups. Six patients had pre-operative nausea in the liraglutide group, of which two had severe nausea, compared with no patients in the insulin infusion and insulin bolus groups (p = 0.007). The pre-operative administration of liraglutide stabilised peri-operative plasma glucose levels and reduced peri-operative insulin requirements, at the expense of increased pre-operative nausea rates.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 29230803 ↗
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