Background: Stress hyperglycemia has been associated with poor prognosis in patients admitted to the cardiac intensive care unit (ICU). Recently, the stress hyperglycemia ratio (SHR) has been proposed to reflect true acute hyperglycemic. This study aimed to investigate the relationship between SHR and prognosis of patients in the cardiac ICU.
Methods: A retrospective analysis was conducted on a cohort of 5,564 patients admitted to the cardiac ICU. The participants were divided into seven groups based on their SHR levels. SHR was calculated as admission blood glucose/[(28.7 × HbA1c %) - 46.7]. The primary outcomes of this study were 28-day all-cause mortality.
Results: During the follow-up period, 349 (6.3%) patients succumbed within 28 days. A U-shaped correlation between SHR and mortality persisted, even after adjusting for other confounding variables, with a discernible inflection point at 0.95. When SHR surpassed 0.95, each standard deviation (SD) increase corresponded to a 1.41-fold elevation in the risk of mortality (odds ratio [OR]: 1.41, 95% CI: 1.25 to 1.59). In contrast, when SHR fell below 0.95, each SD increment correlated with a significantly reduced risk of mortality (OR: 0.56, 95% CI: 0.34 to 0.91).
Conclusion: There was a U-shaped association between SHR and short -term mortality in patients in the cardiac ICU. The inflection point of SHR for poor prognosis was identified at an SHR value of 0.95.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dsx.2023.102932 | DOI Listing |
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