AI Article Synopsis

  • Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) may provide valuable glucose measurements for diabetic patients undergoing hemodialysis, but its accuracy compared to traditional blood glucose monitoring is unclear.
  • The study involved 31 hemodialysis patients, measuring glucose levels with Dexcom G6 CGM and blood glucose periodically; results indicated moderate correlations and some differences in measurements.
  • Despite CGM showing higher mean absolute relative differences than optimal thresholds, most values fell within clinically acceptable ranges, suggesting potential merit in using CGM for this patient group, but further research is necessary.

Article Abstract

Objective: In the general population, continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) provides convenient and less-invasive glucose measurements than conventional self-monitored blood glucose and results in reduced hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia and increased time in target glucose range. However, accuracy of CGM versus blood glucose is not well established in hemodialysis patients.

Research Design And Methods: Among 31 maintenance hemodialysis patients with diabetes hospitalized from October 2020 to May 2021, we conducted protocolized glucose measurements using Dexcom G6 CGM versus blood glucose, with the latter measured before each meal and at night, plus every 30-min during hemodialysis. We examined CGM-blood glucose correlations and agreement between CGM versus blood glucose using Bland-Altman plots, percentage of agreement, mean and median absolute relative differences (ARDs), and consensus error grids.

Results: Pearson and Spearman correlations for averaged CGM versus blood glucose levels were 0.84 and 0.79, respectively; Bland-Altman showed the mean difference between CGM and blood glucose was ∼+15 mg/dL. Agreement rates using %20/20 criteria were 48.7%, 47.2%, and 50.2% during the overall, hemodialysis, and nonhemodialysis periods, respectively. Mean ARD (MARD) was ∼20% across all time periods; median ARD was 19.4% during the overall period and was slightly lower during nonhemodialysis (18.2%) versus hemodialysis periods (22.0%). Consensus error grids showed nearly all CGM values were in clinically acceptable zones A (no harm) and B (unlikely to cause significant harm).

Conclusions: In hemodialysis patients with diabetes, although MARD values were higher than traditional optimal analytic performance thresholds, error grids showed nearly all CGM values were in clinically acceptable zones. Further studies are needed to determine whether CGM improves outcomes in hemodialysis patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11502529PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/dc24-0635DOI Listing

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