• J Diabetes Sci Technol · Jul 2015

    Multicenter Study

    Use of an Intravascular Fluorescent Continuous Glucose Sensor in ICU Patients.

    • Paul J Strasma, Simon Finfer, Oliver Flower, Brian Hipszer, Mikhail Kosiborod, Lewis Macken, Marjolein Sechterberger, Peter H J van der Voort, J Hans DeVries, and Jeffrey I Joseph.
    • GluMetrics, Inc, Irvine, CA, USA paul.strasma@gmail.com.
    • J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2015 Jul 1; 9 (4): 762-70.

    BackgroundHyperglycemia and hypoglycemia are associated with adverse clinical outcomes in intensive care patients. In product development studies at 4 ICUs, the safety and performance of an intravascular continuous glucose monitoring (IV-CGM) system was evaluated in 70 postsurgical patients.MethodsThe GluCath System (GluMetrics, Inc) used a quenched chemical fluorescence mechanism to optically measure blood glucose when deployed via a radial artery catheter or directly into a peripheral vein. Periodic ultrasound assessed blood flow and thrombus formation. Patient glucose levels were managed according to the standard of care and existing protocols at each site. Reference blood samples were acquired hourly and compared against prospectively calibrated sensor results.ResultsIn all, 63 arterial sensors and 9 venous sensors were deployed in 70 patients. Arterial sensors did not interfere with invasive blood pressure monitoring, sampling or other aspects of patient care. A majority of venous sensors (66%) exhibited thrombus on ultrasound. In all, 89.4% (1383/1547) of arterial and 72.2% (182/252) of venous measurements met ISO15197:2003 criteria (within 20%), and 72.7% (1124/1547) of arterial and 56.3% (142/252) of venous measurements met CLSI POCT 12-A3 criteria (within 12.5%). The aggregate mean absolute relative difference (MARD) between the sensors and the reference was 9.6% for arterial and 14.2% for venous sensors.ConclusionsThe GluCath System exhibited acceptable accuracy when deployed in a radial artery for up to 48 hours in ICU patients after elective cardiac surgery. Accuracy of venous deployment was substantially lower with significant rates of intravascular thrombus observed using ultrasound.© 2015 Diabetes Technology Society.

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