Publication: Admission Glucose Level Predicts In-hospital Mortality in Patients with Acute Pulmonary Embolism Who Were Treated with Thrombolytic Therapy.
Program
Authors
Authors
Bozbay, Mehmet
Uyarel, Huseyin
Avsar, Sahin
Oz, Ahmet
Keskin, Muhammed
Murat, Ahmet
Kaya, Adnan
Atas, Halil
Cincin, Ahmet Altug
Ugur, Murat
Advisor
Language
Type
Publisher
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
Elevated admission serum glucose level is associated with unfavourable clinical outcomes in various clinical conditions. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between admission glucose levels and in-hospital and long-term adverse clinical outcomes in patients with pulmonary embolism (PE) treated with thrombolytic therapy.
A total of 183 consecutive confirmed acute PE patients (98 female and 85 male; mean age 61.9 ± 15.7 years) who were treated with thrombolytic therapy enrolled in this study. The study population was categorised into four quartiles according to admission serum glucose levels (group I: glucose ≤115 mg/dl; group II: glucose >115-141 mg/dl; group III: glucose >141-195 mg/dl; and group IV: glucose ≥196 mg/dl).
In-hospital mortality was significantly higher in group IV (28.8 %) compared to group III (15.2 %), group II (6.6 %), and group I (2.1 %) (p < 0.001). In multivariate analysis, admission glucose level (OR 1.013, 95 % CI 1.004-1.021, p = 0.004) and admission anaemia (OR 0.602, 95 % CI 0.380-0.955, p = 0.03) were independent predictors of in-hospital mortality. The mean follow-up period was 34 months. During long-term follow-up, all-cause mortality, recurrent PE, major and minor bleeding were similar among the four groups.
Admission glucose level is a simple, inexpensive, easily available, and effective laboratory parameter for predicting in-hospital mortality in patients with PE.
A total of 183 consecutive confirmed acute PE patients (98 female and 85 male; mean age 61.9 ± 15.7 years) who were treated with thrombolytic therapy enrolled in this study. The study population was categorised into four quartiles according to admission serum glucose levels (group I: glucose ≤115 mg/dl; group II: glucose >115-141 mg/dl; group III: glucose >141-195 mg/dl; and group IV: glucose ≥196 mg/dl).
In-hospital mortality was significantly higher in group IV (28.8 %) compared to group III (15.2 %), group II (6.6 %), and group I (2.1 %) (p < 0.001). In multivariate analysis, admission glucose level (OR 1.013, 95 % CI 1.004-1.021, p = 0.004) and admission anaemia (OR 0.602, 95 % CI 0.380-0.955, p = 0.03) were independent predictors of in-hospital mortality. The mean follow-up period was 34 months. During long-term follow-up, all-cause mortality, recurrent PE, major and minor bleeding were similar among the four groups.
Admission glucose level is a simple, inexpensive, easily available, and effective laboratory parameter for predicting in-hospital mortality in patients with PE.