Guidelines for the Management of Hyperglycemic Crises in Adult Patients with Diabetes
15 Dec, 2024 | 13:18h | UTCIntroduction: Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) and hyperglycemic hyperosmolar state (HHS) are critical, acute complications of type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Recent data show a global rise in DKA and HHS admissions, driven by factors such as psychosocial challenges, suboptimal insulin use, infection, and certain medications (e.g., SGLT2 inhibitors). This consensus report, developed by leading diabetes organizations (ADA, EASD, JBDS, AACE, DTS), provides updated recommendations on epidemiology, pathophysiology, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of DKA and HHS in adults, aiming to guide clinical practice and improve outcomes.
Key Recommendations:
- Diagnosis and Classification:
- DKA is defined by hyperglycemia (>11.1 mmol/l [200 mg/dl] or known diabetes), elevated ketone levels (β-hydroxybutyrate ≥3.0 mmol/l), and metabolic acidosis (pH <7.3 or bicarbonate <18 mmol/l).
- HHS is characterized by marked hyperglycemia, severe hyperosmolality (>320 mOsm/kg), significant dehydration, and minimal ketonaemia or acidosis.
- Consider euglycemic DKA, especially with SGLT2 inhibitor use.
- Classify DKA severity (mild, moderate, severe) to guide the setting of care.
- Fluid and Electrolyte Management:
- Initiate isotonic or balanced crystalloid solutions to restore intravascular volume, enhance renal perfusion, and reduce hyperglycemia.
- Adjust fluids based on hydration, sodium levels, and glucose trends.
- Add dextrose when glucose falls below ~13.9 mmol/l (250 mg/dl) to allow ongoing insulin therapy until ketoacidosis resolves.
- Carefully monitor potassium and provide adequate replacement to prevent severe hypokalemia.
- Insulin Therapy:
- Start a continuous intravenous infusion of short-acting insulin as soon as feasible after confirming adequate potassium.
- For mild or moderate DKA, subcutaneous rapid-acting insulin analogs may be used under close supervision.
- Continue insulin until DKA resolves (pH ≥7.3, bicarbonate ≥18 mmol/l, β-hydroxybutyrate <0.6 mmol/l) or HHS improves (osmolality <300 mOsm/kg, improved mental status).
- Overlap subcutaneous basal insulin by 1–2 hours before discontinuing intravenous insulin to prevent rebound hyperglycemia.
- Additional Considerations:
- Avoid routine bicarbonate; use only if pH <7.0.
- Phosphate supplementation is not routinely recommended unless levels are severely low.
- Identify and treat underlying precipitating causes (infection, psychological factors, medication-related triggers).
- Address social determinants of health and mental health conditions to reduce recurrence.
Conclusion: By implementing these evidence-based recommendations—early diagnosis, structured fluid and insulin therapy, careful electrolyte management, and addressing precipitating factors—clinicians can improve patient care, reduce morbidity and mortality, and enhance the quality of life for adults experiencing DKA and HHS.