Introduction: A sizeable minority of commercially available blood glucose monitoring (BGM) systems fail to satisfy regulatory accuracy requirements, such as ISO 15197:2013, after approval. This study assessed whether the BGMs tested could consistently meet these ISO requirements by investigating their accuracy in a non-standardized setting.
Methods: In this 18-month post-market performance study, using the ISO criteria, healthcare professionals tested the accuracy of four CE-marked BGM systems (Roche Diabetes Care, Mannheim, Germany) on European adults with diabetes mellitus. ISO criteria included 95% of blood glucose (BG) values being within ± 15 mg/dl of a reference measurement for BG < 100 mg/dl or ± 15% for BG ≥ 100 mg/dl and, in the Parkes Consensus Error grid for type 1 diabetes comparing capillary BGM measurements versus reference method, 99% of BG values falling within zone A (no effect on clinical action or outcome) and zone B (altered clinical action with little or no effect on clinical outcome).
Results: BGM readings were obtained from 1650 participants, and the number of readings per BGM system was between 1712 and 2376. The percentage of BGM readings that fell within ISO 15197:2013 limits ranged from 99.4 to 99.9%. For all meter types, 100% of data points fell within zone A or zone B, and most data points for each meter (≥ 99.9%) were in zone A.
Conclusion: All four CE-marked BGM models showed results within the accuracy limits defined by ISO 15197 in a non-standardized setting and thus consistently met regulatory accuracy requirements.
Keywords: Accuracy; Blood glucose meter; Food and Drug Administration; ISO 15197; Post-market performance; Safety.
© 2024. The Author(s).