Glucontrol Study: Comparing the Effects of Two Glucose 
Control Regimens by Insulin in Intensive Care Unit Patients
This study has been 
completed.
  
  
    | 
        
        
          | Sponsors and Collaborators: | University Hospital of Liege Belgian Government |  
          | Information provided by: | University Hospital of Liege |  
          | ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: | NCT00107601 |  | 
 
 Purpose
 Purpose 
Glucontrol is a prospective, randomized, controlled, multi-centric study. The 
present study will compare the effects of two regimens of insulin therapy, 
respectively titrated to achieve a blood sugar level between 4.4 and 6.1 mmol/l 
(80 and 110 mg/dl, respectively) and between 7.8 and 10.0 mmol/l (140 and 180 
mg/dl, respectively). 
This project aims at defining whether a tight glucose control by insulin 
improves the vital outcome in a mixed population of critically ill patients 
(around 3000 patients). 
Secondary outcome variables will include in-hospital and 28-day mortality, 
lengths of stays in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and in the hospital, length of 
ICU stay without life-support therapy, number and clinical signs of episodes of 
hypoglycemia, rates of infections and organ failures, and number of red-cell 
transfusions. 
 
  
  
    | Condition | Intervention | 
  
    | Critical Illness 
 | Drug: Insulin 
 | 
 
MedlinePlus consumer 
health information 
Study Type: Interventional
Study 
Design: Treatment, Randomized, Open Label, Active Control, 
Parallel Assignment, Safety/Efficacy Study 
Official Title: A Multi-Center Study Comparing the Effects 
of Two Glucose Control Regimens by Insulin in Intensive Care Unit Patients
Further study details as provided by University Hospital 
of Liege:
Primary Outcomes: Mortality in the Intensive Care Unit 
(ICU)
Secondary Outcomes: Hospital mortality; 28 Day mortality; Length 
of ICU stay; Length of hospital stay; Number of episodes of hypoglycemia and 
associated clinical signs; Infectious morbidity; Incidence of organ failures; 
Number of red-cell transfusions; Number of days spent in ICU without 
life-support: vasopressors/inotropes, cardiac mechanical support, mechanical 
ventilation, renal replacement therapy; Daily SOFA (Sequential Organ Failure 
Assessment) Score
Expected Total Enrollment:  3500 
Study start: October 2004;  Study 
completion: June 2006
Last follow-up: May 2006;  Data entry 
closure: June 2006 
Hyperglycemia frequently occurs 
during critical illness and is commonly implicated in the development of 
potentially lethal infectious, vascular and metabolic complications. We 
hypothesize that a control of glycemia by insulin will improve the vital outcome 
and the rate of complications in a heterogeneous population of critically ill 
patients. This hypothesis is supported by the findings of a recent trial 
performed in one surgical intensive care unit, which demonstrated a significant 
improvement in vital outcome and in several indices of morbidity in patients 
randomized to a tight control of glycemia. However, these findings can hardly be 
extrapolated to other conditions, including different types of pathologies and 
management. The present prospective, randomized, controlled and multicentric 
study, will compare the effects of two regimens of insulin therapy, respectively 
titrated to achieve a blood sugar level between 4.4 and 6.1 mmol/l (80 and 110 
mg/dl, respectively) and between 7.8 and 10.0 mmol/l (140 and 180 mg/dl, 
respectively) and will be powered to detect a 4% decrease in absolute intensive 
care unit (ICU) mortality. Secondary outcome variables will include in-hospital 
and 28-day mortality, lengths of stays in ICU and in the hospital, length of ICU 
stay without life-support therapy, number and clinical signs of episodes of 
hypoglycemia, rates of infections and organ failures, number of red-cell 
transfusions. 
 Eligibility
 
Eligibility 
Ages Eligible for Study:  18 
Years and above,  Genders Eligible for Study:  Both 
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
  - All adult (older than 18 years old at 
  admission) patients admitted in Intensive Care Unit whatever the reason 
Exclusion Criteria:
  - Absence of the informed consent (as approved by 
  the local ethical committee). 
  
- Life expectancy lower than 24 hours, as estimated upon admission. 
  
- Therapeutic limitation upon admission in ICU 
  
- Pregnancy 
 
 Location Information
 
Location Information 
Belgium      Centre 
Hospitalier Universitaire de Liège, LIEGE,  4000,  Belgium 
      C.H.U. 
Erasme, Bruxelles,  Belgium 
      University 
Hospital Gasthuisberg, Leuven,  Belgium 
France      Hopital 
Raymond Poincare, Garches,  France 
      Université 
Joseph Fournier, Grenoble,  France 
      Institut 
Gustave Roussy, Villejuif,  France 
Germany      Universität 
Ulm, Ulm,  Germany 
Israel      Rabin 
Medical Center, Patah Tiqwa,  Israel 
Netherlands      V.U.Z. 
Amsterdam, Amsterdam,  Netherlands 
Spain      Hospital 
Universitario General Negrin, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria,  Spain 
Switzerland      C.H.U. 
Vaudois, Lausanne,  Switzerland 
 
Study chairs or principal investigators 
Philippe Devos,  Principal Investigator,  
University of Liege    
 More 
Information
 More 
Information 
website 
of the study
Study ID Numbers:  2004-003914-40; EUDRACT Number: 
200400391440
Last Updated:  July 3, 2006
Record first received:  
April 5, 2005
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:  
NCT00107601Health 
Authority: European Union: European Medicines Agency
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2006-11-21