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Endocrine Abstracts (2025) 111 P113 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.111.P113

BSPED2025 Poster Presentations Diabetes 6 (10 abstracts)

Improving care for children at risk of steroid-induced hyperglycaemia: integrating proactive monitoring into routine hospital care

Mai Ali


Leeds Teaching Hospital NHS Trust, Leeds, United Kingdom


Background: Steroid-induced hyperglycaemia (SIH) is a recognised but under-monitored complication in children receiving high-dose corticosteroids for oncological, nephrological, or immunosuppressive indications. Delayed recognition can result in significant metabolic deterioration, prolonged admission, and missed opportunities for early intervention, particularly in patients without pre-existing diabetes.

Aim: To identify system-level barriers to early detection and management of SIH in paediatric inpatients and design a practical pathway to embed proactive glucose monitoring into routine hospital care.

Methods: A retrospective review was conducted between November 2024 and February 2025 at Leeds Children’s Hospital. Seven cases of SIH (defined as ≥14 mmol/l post-steroid initiation) were identified in children under the care of oncology, nephrology, and hepatology teams. Audit data were triangulated with multidisciplinary feedback to develop a targeted quality improvement framework.

Table 1 Key Barriers & Proposed Interventions in SIH Care:
Identified Barrier Intervention
Limited awareness of SIH risk and monitoring protocols among non-diabetes teams MDT education, ward posters, CGM teaching sessions
No standardised local standard operating procedure (SOP) for SIH detection & referral Development of local SIH SOP with glucose thresholds
Inadequate family awareness and engagement Tailored SIH leaflets + diabetes specialised nurse (DSN) involvement at steroid initiation
Delayed diabetes team escalation in borderline cases Proposed EHR-based automatic referral triggers (e.g. >14 mmol/l) for at risk patients.

Conclusion: SIH in paediatrics is frequently under-recognised outside of diabetes-specialist settings. This project highlights a scalable, MDT-driven approach to improve early identification, family communication, and escalation of care. A re-audit is planned to assess the impact of implemented interventions. Wider adoption of proactive SIH monitoring can enhance patient safety and align care with paediatric endocrinology best practice.

Volume 111

52nd Annual Meeting of the British Society for Paediatric Endocrinology and Diabetes

Sheffield, UK
12 Nov 2025 - 14 Nov 2025

British Society for Paediatric Endocrinology and Diabetes 

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