Diabetes Healthcare Professionals Use Multiple Continuous Glucose Monitoring Data Indicators to Assess Glucose Management

Author:

Sheng Tong1ORCID,Offringa Reid1,Kerr David2,Clements Mark3,Fischer Jerome4,Parks Linda1,Greenfield Michael1

Affiliation:

1. Glooko, Inc., Mountain View, CA, USA

2. Sansum Diabetes Research Institute, Santa Barbara, CA, USA

3. Children’s Mercy Kansas City, MO, USA

4. MDREQUEST, San Antonio, TX, USA

Abstract

Background: Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) offers multiple data features that can be leveraged to assess glucose management. However, how diabetes healthcare professionals (HCPs) actually assess CGM data and the extent to which they agree in assessing glycemic management are not well understood. Methods: We asked HCPs to assess ten de-identified CGM datasets (each spanning seven days) and rank order each day by relative glycemic management (from “best” to “worst”). We also asked HCPs to endorse features of CGM data that were important in making such assessments. Results: In the study, 57 HCPs (29 endocrinologists; 28 diabetes educators) participated. Hypoglycemia and glycemic variance were endorsed by nearly all HCPs to be important (91% and 88%, respectively). Time in range and daily lows and highs were endorsed more frequently by educators (all Ps < .05). On average, HCPs endorsed 3.7 of eight data features. Overall, HCPs demonstrated agreement in ranking days by relative glycemic control (Kendall’s W = .52, P < .001). Rankings were similar between endocrinologists and educators ( R2 = .90, Cohen’s kappa = .95, mean absolute error = .4 [all Ps < .05]; Mann-Whitney U = 41, P = .53). Conclusions: Consensus in the endorsement of certain data features and agreement in assessing glycemic management were observed. While some practice-specific differences in feature endorsement were found, no differences between educators and endocrinologists were observed in assessing glycemic management. Overall, HCPs tended to consider CGM data holistically, in alignment with published recommendations, and made converging assessments regardless of practice.

Funder

Glooko, Inc.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Biomedical Engineering,Bioengineering,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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