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Novel device helps diabetics avoid stress linked to glucose testing

Article

FDA approved the first continuous glucose monitoring system that allows for diabetes treatment decisions without requiring a fingerstick.

FDA approved the first continuous glucose monitoring system that allows for diabetes treatment decisions without requiring a fingerstick.

The FreeStyle Libre Flash Glucose Monitoring System (Abbott Diabetes Care), reduces the need for fingerstick testing by using a small sensor wire inserted below the skin’s surface that continuously measures and monitors glucose levels.

Related: Blockbuster diabetes drug earns heart indication

Users can determine glucose levels by waving a dedicated, mobile reader above the sensor wire to determine if glucose levels are too high (hyperglycemia) or too low (hypoglycemia), and how glucose levels are changing, FDA said in a statement.

After a 12-hour start-up period, the system can be worn for up to 10 days.

“The FDA is always interested in new technologies that can help make the care of people living with chronic conditions, such as diabetes, easier and more manageable,” said Donald St. Pierre, acting director of the Office of In Vitro Diagnostics and Radiological Health and deputy director of new product evaluation in the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health. “This system allows people with diabetes to avoid the additional step of fingerstick calibration, which can sometimes be painful, but still provides necessary information for treating their diabetes-with a wave of the mobile reader.”

Related: New device could be breakthrough for diabetics

FDA evaluated data from a clinical study of individuals aged 18 and older with diabetes, and reviewed the device’s performance by comparing readings obtained by the FreeStyle Libre Glucose Monitoring System to those obtained by an established laboratory method used for analysis of blood glucose.

Risks associated with use of the system may include hypoglycemia or hyperglycemia in cases where information provided by the device is inaccurate and used to make treatment decisions, as well as mild skin irritations around the insertion site.

In addition, the system does not provide real-time alerts or alarms in the absence of a user-initiated action; for example, it cannot alert users to low blood glucose levels while they are asleep.

Read more: New diabetes drug enters competitive market

 

 

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