Post-Market Surveillance of a Blood Glucose Test Strip Demonstrates No Evidence of Interference on Clinical Accuracy in a Large Cohort of People with Type 1 or Type 2 Diabetes

被引:4
|
作者
Phillips, Stuart [1 ,2 ]
Setford, Steven [1 ]
Grady, Mike [1 ]
Liu, Zuifang [1 ]
Cameron, Hilary [1 ]
机构
[1] LifeScan Scotland Ltd, Inverness, Scotland
[2] LifeScan Scotland Ltd, Beechwood Pk North, Inverness IV2 3ED, Scotland
来源
关键词
post market surveillance (PMS); accuracy; blood glucose monitoring (BGM); medications; regulations;
D O I
10.1177/19322968211042352
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
BackgroundRegulations and industry guidance relating to testing for interference in blood glucose monitoring (BGM) systems continue to focus on in vitro laboratory bench tests. Post-market surveillance (PMS) in a clinical setting allows for BGM accuracy assessments to evaluate the impact of real-world exposure to polypharmacy in people with diabetes. This study evaluated the OneTouch Select Plus (R) BGM test-strip accuracy with respect to polypharmacy using a clinical registry dataset. MethodsMedication profiles were analysed for 1023 subjects (425 with type 1 (T1D) and 598 with type 2 diabetes (T2D)) attending 3 UK hospitals. Blood samples were analysed to determine clinical accuracy of the BGM test-strip against a laboratory comparator. Results538 different medications (48 diabetes and 490 non-diabetes) were recorded across the 1023 subjects. Patients took on average 6.9 (n = 1-36) individual medications and 4.1 (n = 1-13) unique medication classes. Clinical accuracy to EN ISO 15197:2015 criteria were met irrespective of increasing average number of individual medications, categorized from 1-3, 4-6, 7-9, 10-12 and >12 taken per subject (97.7%, 97.7%, 97.8%, 97.8%, and 98.4%, respectively). Clinical accuracy criteria were met across 15 classes of medication using the combined dataset (97.9%; 29784/30433). Surveillance Error Grid (SEG) analysis showed 98.7% (29959/30368) of readings presented no clinical risk. No individual class or combination of medication classes impacted clinical accuracy of the BGM test-strip. ConclusionsClinical performance for the test strip under assessment demonstrated no evidence of interference from over 500 prescription medications, with clinical accuracy maintained across a range of polypharmacy conditions in people with diabetes.
引用
收藏
页码:141 / 151
页数:11
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