Department of Pediatrics, Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado.
Department of Biostatistics and Informatics, University of Colorado Denver, Aurora, Colorado.
Diabetes Technol Ther. 2020 Oct;22(10):727-733. doi: 10.1089/dia.2019.0521. Epub 2020 Mar 17.
Pediatric patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) may be at risk for malglycemia and adverse outcomes, including infection, prolonged hospital stays, organ dysfunction, graft-versus-host-disease, delayed hematopoietic recovery, and increased mortality. Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) may aid in describing and treating malglycemia in this population. However, no studies have demonstrated safety, tolerability, or accuracy of CGM in this uniquely immunocompromised population. A prospective observational study was conducted, using the Abbott Freestyle Libre Pro, in patients aged 2-30 undergoing HSCT at Children's Hospital Colorado to evaluate continuous glycemia in this population. CGM occurred up to 7 days before and 60 days after HSCT, during hospitalization only. In a secondary analysis of this data, blood glucoses collected during routine HSCT care were compared with CGM values to evaluate accuracy. Adverse events and patient refusal to wear CGM device were monitored to assess safety and tolerability. Participants ( = 29; median age 13.1 years, [interquartile range] [4.7, 16.6] years) wore 84 sensors for an average of 25 [21.5, 30.0] days per participant. Paired serum-sensor values ( = 893) demonstrated a mean absolute relative difference of 20% ± 14% with Clarke Error Grid analysis showing 99% of pairs in the clinically acceptable Zones (A+B). There were four episodes of self-limited bleeding (4.8% of sensors); no other adverse events occurred. Six patients (20.7%) refused subsequent CGM placements. CGM use appears safe and feasible although with suboptimal accuracy in the hospitalized pediatric HSCT population. Few adverse events occurred, all of which were low grade.
接受造血干细胞移植 (HSCT) 的儿科患者可能存在血糖异常和不良后果的风险,包括感染、住院时间延长、器官功能障碍、移植物抗宿主病、造血恢复延迟和死亡率增加。连续血糖监测 (CGM) 可能有助于描述和治疗该人群的血糖异常。然而,尚无研究证明 CGM 在这种免疫功能低下的人群中的安全性、耐受性和准确性。
在科罗拉多儿童医院接受 HSCT 的 2-30 岁患者中进行了一项前瞻性观察研究,使用 Abbott Freestyle Libre Pro 评估该人群中的连续血糖。CGM 发生在 HSCT 前 7 天至后 60 天期间,仅在住院期间进行。在对该数据的二次分析中,将常规 HSCT 护理期间采集的血糖值与 CGM 值进行比较,以评估准确性。监测不良事件和患者拒绝佩戴 CGM 设备,以评估安全性和耐受性。
参与者(n=29;中位年龄 13.1 岁,[四分位距] [4.7,16.6]岁)佩戴了 84 个传感器,平均每个参与者佩戴 25 [21.5,30.0]天。配对的血清-传感器值(n=893)显示平均绝对相对差异为 20%±14%,Clarke 误差网格分析显示 99%的对处于临床可接受的 Zones(A+B)。有 4 例自限性出血事件(4.8%的传感器);未发生其他不良事件。6 名患者(20.7%)拒绝随后的 CGM 放置。
CGM 的使用似乎是安全且可行的,尽管在住院儿科 HSCT 人群中的准确性不理想。发生的不良事件很少,且均为低级别。