Continuous Glucose Monitoring of Steroid-Induced Hyperglycemia in Patients With Dermatologic Diseases

J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2023 Jan 5:19322968221147937. doi: 10.1177/19322968221147937. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Background and objectives: Systemic administration of glucocorticoids is a mainstay therapy for various inflammatory diseases and may lead to hyperglycemia, which carries the risk of worsening preexisting diabetes and triggering steroid-induced diabetes. Therefore, we aimed to identify patients at risk and to quantify severity of steroid-induced hyperglycemia (SIH) by continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) in hospitalized patients needing systemic glucocorticoid treatment.

Patients and methods: This prospective study included 51 steroid-naive, dermatological patients requiring systemic high-dose glucocorticoid treatment at the Department of Dermatology of the University Hospital Essen. After careful diabetes-specific assessment at admission, glucose monitoring was performed using a CGM system and glucose profile was analyzed in patients with and without SIH.

Results: SIH occurred in 47.1% of all treated patients, and a relevant part of patients with initial normoglycemia developed SIH (2/10 patients). Doubling of SIH incidence was observed with each severity grade of dysglycemia (4/10 in prediabetes; 9/10 in diabetes). Patients with SIH spend nearly 6 hours daily above targeted glucose range, and severe hyperglycemia was observed for 1.2 hours/day.

Conclusions: Our study underlines the need for dedicated glucose monitoring in dermatologic patients on systemic glucocorticoid therapy by demonstrating its impact on glucose metabolism.

Keywords: continuous glucose monitoring; diabetes mellitus; glucocorticoid; steroid-induced diabetes; steroid-induced hyperglycemia.