Elevated fasting glucose is common in lung cancer patients undergoing 18F-FDG PET/CT: A brief report
Bojan Bojanic, Moritz Schwyzer, Thomas Sartoretti, Alessa Fischer, Katharina Binz, Giulia Hofer, Antonio G. Gennari, Matthias Ernst, Martin W. Huellner, Joan Walter, Michael Messerli

TL;DR
Many lung cancer patients have high fasting glucose levels, even without known diabetes or typical risk factors, suggesting a need for better screening.
Contribution
This study identifies a high prevalence of non-normal fasting glucose levels in lung cancer patients, independent of traditional risk factors.
Findings
63% of lung cancer patients had non-normal fasting glucose levels.
8% of non-diabetic patients had glucose levels indicative of diabetes.
Traditional risk factors like BMI and fat distribution were not predictive of glucose levels.
Abstract
To characterize glycemic profiles among patients with lung cancer undergoing standardized capillary fasting blood glucose (cFBG) assessment prior to fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (FDG PET/CT) imaging. Consecutive lung cancer patients scheduled for FDG PET/CT were enrolled at the University Hospital Zurich. cFBG was measured before FDG PET/CT and classified according to American Diabetes Association guidelines. Additional analyses were performed in subgroups examined before 11 a.m. and in patients without known diabetes. Multivariable linear regression was used to identify independent factors associated with cFBG levels. The cohort included 240 lung cancer patients (median age 67 years, IQR 60–73; 41 % female, 99/240; median BMI 24 kg/m2, IQR 21–27), of whom 13 % (30/240) had a prior diabetes diagnosis. The median cFBG was 104 mg/dL (IQR 95–115;…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMetabolism, Diabetes, and Cancer · Hyperglycemia and glycemic control in critically ill and hospitalized patients · Cancer, Hypoxia, and Metabolism
