1455 A 10-year review of insulin-related enquiries to the UK National Poisons Information Service (NPIS)

Conclusion We received 1195 enquiries involving insulin. Further analysis was limited to the 169 enquiries involving insulin only (90.5% via injection). Most enquiries (88%) concerned adults ≥ 18 years. There were 34 non-diabetic and 98 diabetic patients: 32 Type 1, 10 Type 2, and 56 type undocumented. Exposures were intentional (n=114, 68%), from therapeutic error (n=28), accidental (n=16) or circumstances unknown (n=11). Long-acting insulins were involved in 71 cases, and the highest dose was 20000 units (table 1). The lowest recorded blood glucose concentration (mmol/L) at the time of the enquiry was in the range 0–0.9 (n=7), 1.0–1.9 (n=29), 2.0–2.9 (n=25), 3.0–3.9 (n=12), >4.0 (n=14). Hypokalaemia (defined as K+<3.5 mmol/L) was noted in 26 (n=15%) enquiries. The maximum Poisoning Severity2 (n=162) was graded: none (n=55), minor (n=29), moderate (n=44), and severe (n=34). Treatments given prior to contacting the NPIS were IV glucose (n=91, 54%), IV/IM glucagon (n=26, 15%), IV octreotide (n=6, 4%) and IV corticosteroids (n=2, 1%). No patient underwent surgical excision of the injection site. Long-acting insulins accounted for 5/6 cases where octreotide was given. Abstract 1455 Table 1Details of dose, insulin type, nadir blood glucose concentration, and Poisoning Severity Score in 169 cases of insulin poisoning reported to the UK National Poisons Information Service in the ten years to 31st October 2021. Ø = unrecordable Insulin type...
Source: Emergency Medicine Journal - Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Tags: RCEM Moderated Papers Source Type: research