| Literature DB >> 30140145 |
Maneesh Shrivastav1, William Gibson2, Rajendra Shrivastav3, Katie Elzea4, Cyrus Khambatta5, Rohan Sonawane1, Joseph A Sierra1, Robert Vigersky1.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30140145 PMCID: PMC6092883 DOI: 10.2337/ds17-0024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Spectr ISSN: 1040-9165
Comparison of P-CGM Systems by Manufacturer (7,8)
| Medtronic iPro2 P-CGM | Dexcom G4 Platinum | Abbott FreeStyle Libre Pro | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Duration of use (days) | 6 | 7 | 14 |
| Insertion site | Abdomen | Abdomen | Upper arm |
| Number of components | 2 (sensor and recorder) | 3 (transmitter, sensor, and receiver) | 2 (sensor and reader) |
| Minimum number of calibrations per day | 2 | 2 | 0 |
| Reading frequency (min) | 5 | 5 | 15 |
| Operational temperature (°F) | 36–86 | 36–77 | 50–86 |
Reasons for P-CGM Use in Primary Care
| • Mitigation of hypoglycemia unawareness |
| • Mitigation of nocturnal hypoglycemia unawareness |
| • Provision of insight into nocturnal blood glucose patterns |
| • Initiation of basal insulin (when necessary) |
| • Understanding of when to initiate mealtime (prandial) insulin |
| • Aid in adjusting the insulin-to-carbohydrate ratio for people with insulin-dependent diabetes |
| • Understanding of how food affects blood glucose (i.e., how meals with various macronutrient ratios affect blood glucose profiles over the course of 24 hours) |
| • Understand of how high-fat foods increase blood glucose over the course of 4–24 hours after ingestion |
| • Increased patient accountability, which in turn improves patient self-care behaviors |
| • Evaluation of the magnitude of the dawn phenomenon (i.e., early morning increase in blood glucose) and how it changes over time with lifestyle intervention |
| • Reduction of medication and insulin use as patient’s insulin resistance or sensitivity changes |
FIGURE 1.Case 1 P-CGM reports: A) initial overlay, B) breakfast overlay, and C) P-CGM overlay ∼18 months after initial evaluation (February 2017).
FIGURE 2.Case 2 P-CGM reports: A) initial P-CGM overlay (October 2014) and B) post-DiAMC program P-CGM overlay (February 2015).
FIGURE 3.Case 3 P-CGM reports: A) initial P-CGM overlay (October 2014) and B) 30-day follow-up P-CGM overlay (November 2014).
FIGURE 4.Case 4 P-CGM reports: A) initial P-CGM overlay (October 2016) and B) recent P-CGM report (February 2017).
Two-Visit P-CGM Workflow for PCP Clinic
| Visit 1: P-CGM Initiation | Visit 2: P-CGM Report Review |
|---|---|
| 1. Discuss CGM basics with the patient. | 1. Remove the sensor from the P-CGM recorder and download data. |
Work Breakdown for CGM CPT Codes
| Code | Workflow | May Be Performed by: | Face-to-Face Meeting Required? |
|---|---|---|---|
| 95250: CGM placement, training, downloading, and report generation | Sensor insertion | Physician, nurse practitioner, or physician’s assistant or licensed staff within scope of practice or under direct supervision of provider | Yes |
| Patient training | Yes | ||
| Meter instruction | Yes | ||
| Removal of transmitter | Yes | ||
| Downloading of data | No | ||
| Entering blood glucose readings | No | ||
| Generating printed reports | No | ||
| 95251: interpretation of CGM data | Provider analysis of reports | Physician, nurse practitioner, or physician’s assistant | No |
Staff may provide services if they meet the Medicare “incident to” rules for reimbursement of services rendered incident to a physician’s professional services.