Glycemic Management as the Primary Determinant of One-Year Mortality after CABG

2018 
Factors linked to mortality after coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) include post-operative hypoglycemia and graft source. However, it is unknown if there is an interaction between these two factors, namely whether arterial grafts withstand hypoglycemia better than veins after CABG. In a cohort of 1323 patients undergoing CABG with intensive insulin therapy (IIT) in the ICU, we identified graft sources, ICU glucometrics, diabetes (DM) status and one-year mortality. Glucometrics included mean BG in ICU, and hypoglycemic excursions (Incidence, Severity [nadir 152mg/dl 4/17, 24% vs. ≤152 9/173, 5%, p=0.039) Preexisting DM was protective in patients with repetitive hypoglycemia (DM 2/43, 5% vs. 15/53 28%, p=0.003). Hypoglycemia in the ICU has a durable impact on one-year mortality post-CABG, superseding graft source, which is only significant without hypoglycemia. Severe hypoglycemia poses the greatest risk, but even mild repetitive BG In conclusion, hypoglycemia erases the survival benefit from arterial grafts, suggesting that it may be equally damaging, regardless of graft source, and far more durable than hitherto envisioned. Disclosure L. Heller: None. M. Zupa: None. P.L. Perreiah: None. R. Rao: None.
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