Publication

Time in Specific Glucose Ranges, Glucose Management Indicator, and Glycemic Variability: Impact of Continuous Glucose Monitoring (CGM) System Model and Sensor on CGM Metrics.

Journal : Journal of diabetes science and technology
Authors : Pleus S, Kamecke U, Waldenmaier D, Link M, Zschornack E, Jendrike N, Haug C, Freckmann G
10.1177/1932296820931825 : DOI
32513087 : PMID
PMC8442198 : PMC-ID

Background

International consensus recommends a set of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) metrics to assess quality of diabetes therapy. The impact of individual CGM sensors on these metrics has not been thoroughly studied yet. This post hoc analysis aimed at comparing time in specific glucose ranges, coefficient of variation (CV) of glucose concentrations, and glucose management indicator (GMI) between different CGM systems and different sensors of the same system.

Method

A total of 20 subjects each wore two Dexcom G5 (G5) sensors and two FreeStyle Libre (FL) sensors for 14 days in parallel. Times in ranges, GMI, and CV were calculated for each 14-day sensor experiment, with up to four sensor experiments per subject. Pairwise differences between different sensors of the same CGM system as well as between sensors of different CGM system were calculated for these metrics.

Results

Pairwise differences between sensors of the same model showed larger differences and larger variability for FL than for G5, with some subjects showing considerable differences between the two sensors. When pairwise differences between sensors of different CGM models were calculated, substantial differences were found in some subjects (75th percentiles of differences of time spent 180 mg/dL: 9.2%, and GMI: 0.42%).

Conclusion

Relevant differences in CGM metrics between different models of CGM systems, and between different sensors of the same model, worn by the same study subjects were found. Such differences should be taken into consideration when these metrics are used in the treatment of diabetes.