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Study protocol of the randomised placebo-controlled GLOBE trial: <i>GL</i>P-1 f<i>o</i>r <i>b</i>ridging of hyperglyca<i>e</i>mia during cardiac surgery.

BMJ Open · 2018

Last updated 2026-05-28

This study is testing whether a GLP-1 drug called liraglutide can help control blood sugar during heart surgery without causing dangerously low blood sugar. In the trial, 274 patients will receive either liraglutide or a placebo before surgery, and researchers will track how many need insulin to keep blood sugar within a safe range. Patients will get 0.6 mg of liraglutide the night before surgery and 1.2 mg just before the procedure.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalBMJ Open, 2018
Citations11
Relative citation ratio0.52
NIH percentile30
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Cardiovascular Risk Reduction

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Perioperative hyperglycaemia is common during cardiac surgery and associated with postoperative complications. Although intensive insulin therapy for glycaemic control can reduce complications, it carries the risk of hypoglycaemia. GLP-1 therapy has the potential to lower glucose without causing hypoglycaemia. We hypothesise that preoperative liraglutide (a synthetic GLP-1 analogue) will reduce the number of patients requiring insulin to achieve glucose values<8 mmol l in the intraoperative period. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: We designed a multi-centre randomised parallel placebo-controlled trial and aim to include 274 patients undergoing cardiac surgery, aged 18-80 years, with or without diabetes mellitus. Patients will receive 0.6 mg liraglutide or placebo on the evening before, and 1.2 mg liraglutide or placebo just prior to surgery. Blood glucose is measured hourly and controlled with an insulin bolus algorithm, with a glycaemic target between 4-8 mmol l. The primary outcome is the percentage of patients requiring insulin intraoperatively. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This study protocol has been approved by the medical ethics committee of the Academic Medical Centre (AMC) in Amsterdam and by the Dutch competent authority. The study is investigator-initiated and the AMC, as sponsor, will remain owner of all data and have all publication rights. Results will be submitted for publication in a peer-reviewed international medical journal. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NTR6323; Pre-results.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 29866735 ↗