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Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated...

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Making The Most Making The Most of Continuous Glucose of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood, PA 19096 (877) 735-3648 www.integrateddiabetes.com [email protected]
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Page 1: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Making The Most Making The Most of Continuous Glucose of Continuous Glucose MonitoringMonitoring

Gary Scheiner MS, CDEOwner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204Wynnewood, PA 19096(877) [email protected]

Page 2: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Making the Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring

1. What Information Is Available?

2. How to Use Immediate Data?

3. How to Use Intermediate Data?

4. What Can Be Learned from Retrospective Analysis?

5. Optimizing CGM System Performance

Page 3: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

MiniMed Paradigm® & Guardian® REAL-Time CGM Systems

On-Screen Reports

• 3-hr and 24-hr graphs (pump); 3 / 6 / 12 / 24-hr graphs (Guardian)

• Can scroll back for specific data points

• “direction” indicators• Updates every 5 minutes• Hi/Low Alerts• Predictive Alerts (Guardian)

Page 4: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

CareLink™ Personal:Online Reports

• Sensor daily overlay

• Sensor overlay by meal

MiniMed Paradigm® & Guardian® REAL-Time CGM Systems

Page 5: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Daily summaries & layered reports, including…

• Sensor tracing

• Basal & bolus delivery

• Carbohydrate & logbook entries

MiniMed Paradigm® & Guardian® REAL-Time CGM Systems

CareLink™ Personal Online Reports

Page 6: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

DexCom™ 7 STS®

On-Screen Reports

• 1, 3, 9-hr graphs

• Updates every 5 minutes

• Hi/Low alerts

Page 7: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

DexCom™ 7 STS®

Hourly Stats Glucose Trend

Dexcom DM2 Download Reports

Page 8: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

DexCom™ 7 STS®

BG Distribution

Trend Analysis

Dexcom DM2 Download Reports

Page 9: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Freestyle Navigator™

On-Screen Reports

• 2/4/6/12/24-hr line graphs• Predictive alerts• “direction”

indicators• Can scroll back to data points

• Customizable time range: • Highest, Lowest, Avg, SD• % Time High, Low, In-Range• # Hypo, Hyper events

• Updates every minute

Page 10: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Practical Benefits of Real-Time CGM• Rumble strips (avoid serious extremes)

• Peace of mind

• Basal & bolus fine tuning

• Postprandial analysis

• Insulin action curve determination

• Short-term Forecasting

• Learning tool & immediate feedback

• Eliminates some blood glucose checks???

Partially derived from: Hirsch, et al. Clinical Application of Emerging Sensor Technologies in Diabetes Management: Consensus Guidelines for Continuous Glucose Monitoring (CGM). Diabetes Technology & Therapeutics, 10:4, 2008, 232-244.

Page 11: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

How to Look at the Information

• Immediate

• Intermediate

• Retrospective

                                          

      

Page 12: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Immediate Info: Alerts

• Alert the user of glucose levels that have crossed specified thresholds, either high or low

• Visual cues on-screen

• Vibrations, audible tones

Page 13: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Setting Alerts

• Individualize settings

• Alarm thresholds are not BG targets

• Balance need for alerts against “nuisance factor”

Page 14: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

LOW: 80 mg/dl(90+ if hypo unaware)

HIGH: 240 mg/dL(lower progressively toward 180)

NOT RECOMMENDED: Low 70 mg/dL NOT RECOMMENDED: High 140 mg/dL

Alert Settings Recommendation

Derived from: Hirsch, et al. Clinical Application of Emerging Sensor Technologies in Diabetes Management: Consensus Guidelines for Continuous Glucose Monitoring (CGM). Diabetes Technology & Therapeutics, 10:4, 2008, 232-244.

Page 15: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Special Alert Settings

• Young children (higher, wider range)

• Hypoglycemia unawareness (higher)

• Pregnancy (lower, narrower range)

• HbA1c of 11.0% (higher initially)

Page 16: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Immediate Info: Real-Time Adjustments

• Prediction/Forecasting

• Safety/Performance•Driving• Sports• Tests

Page 17: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Immediate Info: Real-Time Adjustments

• Replace Fingersticks?• Not during first 3-7 days of

system use

• Wait until 12-24 hrs after sensor replacement

• If BG Stable

• If Recent calibrations in-line

• If No recent alarms

Page 18: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Immediate Info: Potential Bolus Adjustment

Based on BG Direction• BG Stable:

Usual Bolus Dose

• BG Rising Gradually: bolus 10%

• BG Rising Sharply: bolus 20%

• BG Dropping Gradually: bolus 10%

• BG Dropping Sharply: bolus 20%

Page 19: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Immediate Info: Hypoglycemia Alerts

• Predictive Hypo Alert: Subtle Treatment • 50% of usual carbs

•Med-High G.I. food

• Hypo Alert & Dropping: Aggressive Treatment• Full or increased carbs

•High G.I. food

Page 20: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Intermediate Info:Use of 2/3/4 Hr Trend Graphs

• Effects of different food types

• Effectiveness of bolus amt.

• Reveals postprandial spikes

• Pramlintide/Exenatide Influence

• Exercise effects

• Impact of Stress

Page 21: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Intermediate Info:Use of 9 / 12 / 24 Hr Trend Graphs

• Facilitates decision-making for basal insulin doses

• Shows delayed effects of exercise, stress, high-fat foods

• Reveals overnight patterns

• Lets user know when bolus action is complete

Page 22: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Specific Insights to Derive(a purely retrospective journey)

Page 23: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Case Study 1: Effectiveness of Current Program

• Type 1 diabetes; using insulin glargine & MDI• Overnight readings are OK; HbA1c levels are elevated

Meal doses insufficient; not covering snacks?Meal doses insufficient; not covering snacks?

3 AM 6 AM

Glu

cose

(m

g/d

L)

400

300

200

100

0

9 AM 12 PM 3 PM 6 PM 9 PM

Page 24: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Case Study 2a: Basal Insulin Regulation

• Rising 2 AM – 8 AM• Rising 2 AM – 8 AM• Stable 12 AM – 4 AM, then dropping pre-dawn

• Dropping late afternoon

• Stable 12 AM – 4 AM, then dropping pre-dawn

• Dropping late afternoon

3 AM 9 AM 3 PM 9 PM 3 AM 9 AM 3 PM 9 PM

Glu

cose

(m

g/d

L)

400

300

200

100

0

400

300

200

100

0

Page 25: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Case Study 2b: Basal Insulin Regulation

• Type 1 diabetes; using insulin glargine & MDI• History of morning lows• Now not “covering” highs at night

BG dropping overnight; insulin dose too highBG dropping overnight; insulin dose too high

Glu

cose

(m

g/d

L)

400

300

200

100

0

3 AM 6 AM 9 AM 12 PM 3 PM 6 PM 9 PM

Page 26: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Case Study 3: Detection of Silent Hypoglycemia

• Type1 diabetes; on pump

• Frequent fasting highs (9 AM)

Somogyi effect during the nightSomogyi effect during the night

Glu

cose

(m

g/d

L)

400

300

200

100

0

3 AM 6 AM 9 AM 12 PM 3 PM 6 PM 9 PM

Page 27: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Case Study 4: Determination of Insulin Action Curve

3-Hour Duration

5-HourDuration

4-Hour Duration

Page 28: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Case Study 5: Fine-Tuning Meal Boluses

Breakfast and lunch doses

may be too low

Breakfast and lunch doses

may be too low

Dinner dose appears OK Dinner dose appears OK

Glu

cose

(m

g/d

L)

400

300

200

100

0

3 AM 6 AM 9 AM 12 PM 3 PM 6 PM 9 PM

Night-snack dose clearly insufficient

Night-snack dose clearly insufficient

Page 29: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Case Study 6: Fine-Tuning Correction Boluses

Need to change correction factor & insulin sensitivity during AM hours

Need to change correction factor & insulin sensitivity during AM hours

• Dropping low after correcting for highs at bedtime and wake-up time

Glu

cose

(m

g/d

L)

400

300

200

100

0

3 AM 6 AM 9 AM 12 PM 3 PM 6 PM 9 PM

Page 30: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Case Study 7: Postprandial Analysis

• Pre-meal BG levels are usually in target range• HbA1c are higher than expected based on SMBG• Tired and lethargic after meals

Significant postprandial spikes (300s)Significant postprandial spikes (300s)

Glu

cose

(m

g/d

L)

400

300

200

100

Meal

Meal

MealMeal

Page 31: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Case Study 8: Impact of Physical Activity

• Type 1 diabetes; pump user• Basal rates confirmed overnight• Exercises in the evening (9 PM)

Experiencing delayed-onset hypoglycemiaExperiencing delayed-onset hypoglycemia

Glu

cose

(m

g/d

L)

400

300

200

100

0

3 PM 6 PM 9 PM 12 AM 3 AM 6 AM 9 AM 12 PM

Exercise

Page 32: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Case Study 9: Impact of Stress

• Type 1 diabetes; pump user

• 40 years old; athletic

• Handsome, excellent speaker

• Gets flat tire; eats 15g carbs to prepare for tire change

• Spare is flat too!!

STRESS CAN RAISE BLOOD GLUCOSE… A LOT!!!STRESS CAN RAISE BLOOD GLUCOSE… A LOT!!!

• Late for meetingG

luco

se

(mg

/dL

)

400

300

200

100

0

9 AM 12 PM 3 PM 6 PM 9 PM

Page 33: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Case Study 10: Impact of Various Food Types

BG peaks later with pasta than rice

BG peaks later with pasta than rice

Postprandial peak: cereal > oatmeal > yogurtPostprandial peak:

cereal > oatmeal > yogurt

Pasta MealStir-Fry Over Rice

CerealOatmealYogurt

Page 34: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Optimizing CGM System Performance

• Calibration

• Site selection/care

• Signal reception

• Ingredients for success

Page 35: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

• Calibrate at times when blood glucose (BG) is stable (fasting, pre-meals)

• Avoid calibrations during times of rapid glucose change– Post meal

– UP or DOWN arrows are displayed

– In the period following a correction with food or insulin

– During exercise

Optimal Calibration

Page 36: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

• Calibrate before bedtime to avoid alarms during the night

• Use good technique when performing BG checks for calibration– Proper coding

– Clean hands

• USE FINGERSTICKS

• Enter the calibration immediately after the fingerstick (Dexcom, Medtronic systems)

Optimal Calibration

Page 37: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Sensor Sites• Site Selection

– “Fleshy” areas

– At least 3” Away from insulin infusion

– Avoid tight clothing areas, scars, bruises, lipoatrophy

– Rotate sites

• Bleeding/Irritation– Slight bleeding OK

– Profuse bleeding: remove

– Remove introducer needle at proper angle

Page 38: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Sensor Sites• Adhesive

– Completely cover the Transmitter & Sensor (Navigator & Medtronic systems)

– Check sensor daily for loose tape– Apply extra tape over sensor & transmitter if tape patch begins to

“curl” around edges

• Site Irritation– Watch for redness, swelling, tenderness– Remove sensor with prolonged irritation (>1 hour)

Page 39: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Signal Reception• Heed transmitter ranges

– Medtronic: 6 ft.– Dexcom: 5 ft.– Navigator: 10 ft.

• Signals do not travel well through water

– Wear receiver on same side of body as sensor

• Keep receiver very close while charging (Dexcom)

• Charge transmitter fully every 6 days (Medtronic)

            

       

Page 40: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Ingredients For Success

• Wear the CGM at least 90% of the time

• Look at the monitor 10-20 times per day

• Do not over-react to the data

• Adjust your therapy based on trends/patterns

• Take IOB into account when using CGM values

• Minimize “nuisance” alarms

Source: Dr. Bruce Bode, personal observation.

Page 41: Making The Most of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Gary Scheiner MS, CDE Owner/Director, Integrated Diabetes Services 333 E. Lancaster Ave., Suite 204 Wynnewood,

Think Like A Pancreas!


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