Download - Titrating Insulin to Glycemic Target Judy Bowen, MD CIM Rotation September, 2006.

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Page 1: Titrating Insulin to Glycemic Target Judy Bowen, MD CIM Rotation September, 2006.

Titrating Insulin to Glycemic Target

Judy Bowen, MD

CIM Rotation

September, 2006

Page 2: Titrating Insulin to Glycemic Target Judy Bowen, MD CIM Rotation September, 2006.

Case 1

• Mrs. G, 46 y.o. was diagnosed with Type 2 DM diagnosed 5 years ago (initially treated with diet and exercise, then glipizide XL 5 mg BID and metformin 1,000 mg BID) has these Hgb A1c values q 3 months over the past year:

• 5.8%• 6.3%• 7.4%• 7.8%

Page 3: Titrating Insulin to Glycemic Target Judy Bowen, MD CIM Rotation September, 2006.

Case 1, continued

• Her BMI is 33, BP is 126/72, micro-albumin is 9 on lisinopril 10 mg, LDL is 89 on Lipitor 10 mg. She takes 81 mg ASA daily. Her eye exam is up-to-date and normal. Monofilament exam is normal. Your exam is normal except for her obesity.

• Her fasting a.m. CBGs are 140-180• What do you recommend?

Page 4: Titrating Insulin to Glycemic Target Judy Bowen, MD CIM Rotation September, 2006.

Schematic of 24-hour glucose profile

0

100

200

6 a.m. noon 6 p.m 12 a.m. 6 a.m.

Riddle M. AJM, 2004; 116:3S-9S

Page 5: Titrating Insulin to Glycemic Target Judy Bowen, MD CIM Rotation September, 2006.

Initiating basal insulin therapy

• Add basal insulin therapy– Start with 10 units insulin in most patients– Use either NPH or glargine (both work)– NPH q HS, glargine either q HS or q AM– Glargine was associated with less nocturnal

hypoglycemia (Riddle et al, Diabetes Care, 2003; 26:3080-3086)

• Continue with oral agents

• Consider adverse effects

Page 6: Titrating Insulin to Glycemic Target Judy Bowen, MD CIM Rotation September, 2006.

Treat-To-Target• Goal: near normal fasting CBGs (~100 mg/dl)

• Adjust dose weekly – based on average of two previous fasting CGBs

• Titration:– If CBG >/= 180, increase insulin by 8 units– If CBG 140-180, increase insulin by 6 units– If CBG 120-140, increase insulin by 4 units– If CBG 100-120, increase insulin by 2 units

• No increase if any hypoglycemia (CBG < 72) with or without symptoms

Page 7: Titrating Insulin to Glycemic Target Judy Bowen, MD CIM Rotation September, 2006.

Relationship of A1c to CBG

4%5%

6%7%

8%9%

10%

65100135170205240275

Page 8: Titrating Insulin to Glycemic Target Judy Bowen, MD CIM Rotation September, 2006.

Relationship of A1c to CBG

4%5%

6%7%

8%9%

10%

65100135170205240275

Page 9: Titrating Insulin to Glycemic Target Judy Bowen, MD CIM Rotation September, 2006.

Case 1, continued

• Mrs. G agrees to start bedtime glargine 10 units, and feels confident she can titrate using the “Treat to Target” instructions with RN follow up. Over the next 3 weeks, she achieves fasting CBGs in the 100-120 range with 20 units glargine at bedtime, and no symptoms of hypoglycemia. Her follow up Hgb A1c 3 months after starting insulin is 6.5%

Page 10: Titrating Insulin to Glycemic Target Judy Bowen, MD CIM Rotation September, 2006.

Case 2

• Mr. M, a 65 year-old patient with Type 2 DM for 10 years is on metformin 1,000 mg BID and insulin:– NPH q a.m. 30 units + Regular 10 units

– NPH q p.m. (supper) 25 units + Regular 15 units

• His fasting CBGs are in the 120’s but his Hgb A1c is now 8.0%. He wants better control.

• What do you recommend?

Page 11: Titrating Insulin to Glycemic Target Judy Bowen, MD CIM Rotation September, 2006.

Switching to Basal/Prandial Insulin• To switch to glargine

– Add up his current total insulin dose (80 units)

– Reduce by 20% (64 units)

– Give half as glargine (32 units)

– Titrate using fasting CBGs and ‘treat-to-target’

• To add lispro/aspart– (Onset is 5-15 min, peak is 30-90 min, duration is 3.5 –

5 hours)

– Send to Diabetes Education to learn carb counting

– Give remaining “half” of total dose based on meals:

• 10 + 10 + 12 depending on carb load

Page 12: Titrating Insulin to Glycemic Target Judy Bowen, MD CIM Rotation September, 2006.

Pearls

• Insulin therapy is associated with weight gain• Glargine doesn’t last 24 hours in every patient

(nor is NPH predictable)• We usually wait too long to start insulin in Type 2

patients • Early insulin therapy may be associated with

better daytime prandial secretion from native pancreas

• Finger sticks are more painful than insulin shots