Commutable Blood Materials from the Fixed-Cell Method for Performance Evaluation of Blood Glucose by a Glucose Meter
Napaporn Apiratmateekul, Jintana Nammoonnoy, Gerald J. Kost, Wanvisa Treebuphachatsakul

TL;DR
This study evaluates processed blood materials for testing glucose meters, finding they are stable and useful but require commutability testing for accurate performance evaluation.
Contribution
The study introduces fixed-cell method-derived PBMs for glucose meter evaluation and highlights the need for commutability testing.
Findings
PBMs remained homogenized and stable for at least 180 days.
Six out of ten PBMs were commutable across glucose meters.
Performance of glucose meters varied depending on commutability and target values.
Abstract
Glucose meters provide a rapid blood glucose status for evidence-based diagnosis, monitoring, and treatment of diabetes mellitus. We aimed to evaluate the commutability of processed blood materials (PBMs) and their use in the performance evaluation of glucose meters. Two PBMs obtained by the fixed-cell method were analyzed for homogeneity, stability, and commutability. The compatibility of ten pairs between mass spectrometry and each glucose meter was categorized as compatible (mean paired difference ≤ 5%) and incompatible (mean paired difference > 5%). The performance of glucose meter 1 (n = 767) and glucose meter 2 (n = 266) was assessed. The glucose in the PBMs remained homogenized and stable for at least 180 days. Six out of ten pairs had commutable PBMs. Commutability of PBMs was observed in both well-compatible and incompatible glucose results. Target glucose values from mass…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHyperglycemia and glycemic control in critically ill and hospitalized patients · Diabetes Management and Research · Diabetes and associated disorders
