Advances in safe insulin infusions

Fred Massoomi, Maureen Burger, Christine de Vries

Abstract

Hyperglycaemia is recognized as a marker of adverse clinical outcomes for hospitalized patients with and without diabetes, including mortality, morbidity, increased length of stay, infections and overall complications. In some cases, intravenous (IV) insulin infusions are the optimal intervention and, to date, these have been compounded in hospital pharmacy departments or, alternatively, at the point of care, when timeliness is a concern or the pharmacy is closed. However, in-house compounding of high-risk medications such as IV insulin poses risks both for patients and institutions. The critical nature of certain high-risk therapies has led to the development of ready-to-administer products to improve the safety, timeliness, efficacy and efficiency of critical infusions. Recently, IV insulin, a high-alert therapy, has been added to the ready-to-use armamentarium. This narrative review explores the expanding indications, risks and opportunities associated with insulin infusions and potential options for improved safety.

Article Details

Article Type

Review

DOI

10.7573/dic.2021-1-6

Publication Dates

Accepted: ; Published: .

Citation

Massoomi F, Burger M, de Vries C. Advances in safe insulin infusions. Drugs in Context 2021; 10: 2021-1-6. DOI: 10.7573/dic.2021-1-6

Article Views

Monthly article views (last 12 months)

Drugs in Context PubMed Central
Source HTML views PDF downloads Totals
Drugs in Context since September 15, 2025 88 2 90
PubMed Central since November 1, 2024 386 43 429
Totals 474 45 517
Register for alerts

I would like to be contacted by Drugs in Context when new articles are posted.

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.