Hyperglycemia and glycemic control in critically ill and hospitalized patients Open access Peer reviewed

The Use of Prophylactic Insulin in Surgical Patients without Diabetes

Jamie K. Schnuck, Ian A. Jones, Robert H. Schmicker, Bryan A. Comstock and 7 more

Annals of Surgery | Jun 17, 2026

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Prophylactic insulin improves glycemic outcomes and may improve clinical outcomes, possibly in part through anti-inflammatory mechanisms, in non-diabetic surgical patients undergoing major abdominopelvic surgery.

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OBJECTIVE: Determine the feasibility and proof-of-concept of using prophylactic insulin (glucose-insulin-potassium [GIK]) to improve outcomes in non-diabetic (NoDM) surgical patients. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA: Perioperative hyperglycemia increases the risk of morbidity/mortality and insulin is used to treat it. Prevention of hyperglycemia with prophylactic insulin may be better than using treatment insulin alone, but feasibility issues need to be addressed before developing a full-scale randomized controlled trial (RCT). METHODS: A pilot RCT of GIK vs placebo among NoDM undergoing major abdominopelvic surgery. Feasibility (willingness to randomize, treatment completion) and clinical outcomes (glycemic control, neutrophil:lymphocyte ratio [NLR], and morbidity/mortality) were measured through 30 days. RESULTS: Of 248 eligible patients, 103 randomized (mean age 56, 54% female) to GIK (n=50) or placebo (n=53). Treatment was completed in 97% without episodes of severe hypoglycemia. Perioperative euglycemia ( 140 mg/dL) was less common in the GIK arm (37% vs. 48%, P<0.05), as was the use of treatment insulin (26% vs. 45%, aRR 0.6 [95% CI 0.4, 0.9]). The rise in NLR from pre-operative to post-operative day 1 was lower in the GIK group vs placebo (Delta 0.5, 95% CI -6.23 to 3.32). Fewer complications were noted in the GIK arm (12%) vs. control (21%) (aRR 0.5 [95% CI 0.2, 1.5]), albeit wide confidence intervals. CONCLUSION: Prophylactic insulin improves glycemic outcomes and may improve clinical outcomes, possibly in part through anti-inflammatory mechanisms. A full-scale RCT focused on morbidity/mortality endpoints is feasible and would address an important evidence gap.

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Jamie K. Schnuck

first | University of Washington | ORCID 0000-0002-1112-8961

Ian A. Jones

middle | University of Washington | ORCID 0000-0002-6051-4762

Robert H. Schmicker

middle | University of Washington | ORCID 0000-0001-7100-7910

Bryan A. Comstock

middle | University of Washington | ORCID 0000-0003-2599-1608

Armando E. Rodriguez Martinez

middle | University of Washington | ORCID 0009-0006-7336-7243

Sara DePaoli

middle | University of Washington

Erin E. Fannon

middle | University of Washington

Isaac A. Knouff

middle | University of Washington

Hirsch Ib

middle | University of Washington

E. Patchen Dellinger

middle | University of Washington

D FLUM

last | University of Washington

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BibTeX

@article{Schnuck2026Prophylactic,
  title = {The Use of Prophylactic Insulin in Surgical Patients without Diabetes},
  author = {Jamie K. Schnuck and Ian A. Jones and Robert H. Schmicker and Bryan A. Comstock and Armando E. Rodriguez Martinez and Sara DePaoli and Erin E. Fannon and Isaac A. Knouff and Hirsch Ib and E. Patchen Dellinger and D FLUM},
  journal = {Annals of Surgery},
  year = {2026},
  doi = {10.1097/sla.0000000000007119},
  url = {https://doi.org/10.1097/sla.0000000000007119}
}

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