학술논문

Real-world Accuracy of CGM in Inpatient Critical and Noncritical Care Settings at a Safety-Net Hospital.
Document Type
Article
Source
Diabetes Care. Oct2023, Vol. 46 Issue 10, p1825-1830. 6p.
Subject
*SAFETY-net health care providers
*CRITICAL care medicine
*PAIRED reading
*HOSPITAL patients
*CRITICALLY ill
*HOSPITALS
Language
ISSN
0149-5992
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: We sought to determine real-world accuracy of inpatient continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) at multiple levels of acuity in a large safety-net hospital. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We analyzed records from hospitalized patients on Dexcom G6 CGM, including clinical, point of care (POC), and laboratory (Lab) glucose, and CGM data. POC/Lab values were matched to the closest timed CGM value. Encounters were divided into not critically ill (NCI) versus critically ill (CI). CGM accuracy was evaluated. RESULTS: Paired readings (2,744 POC-CGM; 3,705 Lab-CGM) were analyzed for 233 patients with 239 encounters (83 NCI, 156 CI). POC-CGM aggregated and average mean absolute relative differences (MARD) were 15.1% and 17.1%. Lab-CGM aggregated and average MARDs were 11.4% and 12.2%. Accuracy for POC-CGM and Lab-CGM was 96.5% and 99.1% in Clarke Error Grid zones A/B. CONCLUSIONS: Real-world accuracy of inpatient CGM is acceptable for NCI and CI patients. Further exploration of conditions associated with lower CGM accuracy in real-world settings is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]