Literature DB >> 28829160

Venous, Arterialized-Venous, or Capillary Glucose Reference Measurements for the Accuracy Assessment of a Continuous Glucose Monitoring System.

Jort Kropff1, Sigrid C van Steen1, Peter deGraaff1, Man W Chan1, Rombout B E van Amstel1, J Hans DeVries1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Different reference methods are used for the accuracy assessment of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) systems. The effect of using venous, arterialized-venous, or capillary reference measurements on CGM accuracy is unclear.
METHODS: We evaluated 21 individuals with type 1 diabetes using a capillary calibrated CGM system. Venous or arterialized-venous reference glucose samples were taken every 15 min at two separate visits and assessed per YSI 2300 STAT Plus. Arterialization was achieved by heated-hand technique. Capillary samples were collected hourly during the venous reference visit. The investigation sequence (venous or arterialized-venous) was randomized. Effectiveness of arterialization was measured by comparing free venous oxygen pressure (PO2) of both visit days. Primary endpoint was the median absolute relative difference (ARD).
RESULTS: Median ARD using arterialized-venous reference samples was not different from venous samples (point estimated difference 0.52%, P = 0.181). When comparing the three reference methods, median ARD was also not different over the full glycemic range (venous 9.0% [n = 681], arterialized-venous 8.3% [n = 684], and capillary 8.1% [n = 205], P = 0.216), nor over the separate glucose ranges. Arterialization was successful (PO2 venous 5.4 kPa vs. arterialized-venous 8.9 kPa, P < 0.001). Arterialized-venous glucose was significantly higher than venous glucose and numerically higher than capillary glucose (arterialized-venous 142 mg/dL vs. venous 129 mg/dL [P < 0.001] and vs. capillary 134 mg/dL [P = 0.231]). Inconvenience related to arterialization included transient mild edema and redness of the hand in 4 out of 21 (19%) patients.
CONCLUSIONS: The use of venous, arterialized-venous, or capillary reference measurements did not significantly impact CGM accuracy. Venous reference seems preferable due to its ease of operation.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Accuracy; Arterialization; Arterialized-venous; Continuous glucose monitoring; Type 1 diabetes; Venous

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Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28829160     DOI: 10.1089/dia.2017.0189

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Diabetes Technol Ther        ISSN: 1520-9156            Impact factor:   6.118


  3 in total

1.  Performance and Usability of Three Systems for Continuous Glucose Monitoring in Direct Comparison.

Authors:  Guido Freckmann; Manuela Link; Ulrike Kamecke; Cornelia Haug; Bernhard Baumgartner; Raimund Weitgasser
Journal:  J Diabetes Sci Technol       Date:  2019-02-07

2.  Comparative Accuracy Analysis of a Real-time and an Intermittent-Scanning Continuous Glucose Monitoring System.

Authors:  Manuela Link; Ulrike Kamecke; Delia Waldenmaier; Stefan Pleus; Arturo Garcia; Cornelia Haug; Guido Freckmann
Journal:  J Diabetes Sci Technol       Date:  2019-12-17

Review 3.  Measures of Accuracy for Continuous Glucose Monitoring and Blood Glucose Monitoring Devices.

Authors:  Guido Freckmann; Stefan Pleus; Mike Grady; Steven Setford; Brian Levy
Journal:  J Diabetes Sci Technol       Date:  2018-11-19
  3 in total

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