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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 2026-05-28

In 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.

JournalAnaesthesia, 2018
Citations48
Relative citation ratio2.33
NIH percentile78
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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