Freestyle Lite Error 3
Problem with the FreeStyle Lite Blood Glucose Test Strip. Problem with the meter. What You Should Do Be sure you see the Blood Drop and Test Strip symbols on the display screen before you apply blood or control solution. Conduct a control solution test using a new FreeStyle Lite Blood Glucose Test Strip. FreeStyle Auto-Assist is software which is compatible with the FreeStyle InsuLinx, FreeStyle Lite and FreeStyle Freedom Lite. The Software offers a solution that permits patients with diabetes, healthcare teams and caregivers to manage diabetes with reports, reminders and messages. Blood was applied to the test strip too soon. Slide and release to turn off the meter and release the test strip, then turn on the meter again. Repeat the test, waiting for the flashing test strip and blood drop symbol before touching blood or control solution to the end of the test strip.
- Read the instructions in this user’s manual. Failure to follow instructions will cause incorrect results. Practise the testing procedures before using the meter. Follow your healthcare professional’s advice when testing blood glucose levels and blood β-Ketone levels. Observe caution when using around children. Small parts may constitute a.
- Im usin the freestyle lite one and i seem to always have problems with this. I never had this problem with the freestyle mini one. Any feedback would be great, thanks.
Abstract
Background
This multicenter study was conducted to evaluate the performance of five recently introduced blood glucose (BG) monitoring (BGM) devices under daily routine conditions in comparison with the YSI (Yellow Springs, OH) 2300 Stat Plus glucose analyzer.
Methods
Five hundred one diabetes patients with experience in self-monitoring of BG were randomized to use three of five different BGM devices (FreeStyle Lite® [Abbott Diabetes Care Inc., Alameda, CA], FreeStyle Freedom Lite [Abbott Diabetes Care], OneTouch® UltraEasy® [LifeScan Inc., Milpitas, CA], Accu-Chek® Aviva [Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany], and Contour® [Bayer Vital GmbH, Leverkusen, Germany]) in a daily routine setting. All devices and strips were purchased from local regular distribution sources (pharmacies, four strip lots per device). The patients performed the finger prick and the glucose measurement on their own. In parallel, a healthcare professional performed the glucose assessment with the reference method (YSI 2300 Stat Plus). The primary objective was the comparison of the mean absolute relative differences (MARD). Secondary objectives were compliance with the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) accuracy criteria under these routine conditions and Clarke and Parkes Error Grid analyses.
Results
MARD ranged from 4.9% (FreeStyle Lite) to 9.7% (OneTouch UltraEasy). The ISO 15197:2003 requirements were fulfilled by the FreeStyle Lite (98.8%), FreeStyle Freedom Lite (97.5%), and Accu-Chek Aviva (97.0%), but not by the Contour (92.4%) and OneTouch UltraEasy (91.1%). The number of values in Zone A of the Clarke Error Grid analysis was highest for the FreeStyle Lite (98.8%) and lowest for the OneTouch Ultra Easy (90.4%).
Conclusions
FreeStyle Lite, FreeStyle Freedom Lite, and Accu-Chek Aviva performed very well in this study with devices and strips purchased through regular distribution channels, with the FreeStyle Lite achieving the lowest MARD in this investigation.
Introduction
Blood glucose (BG) control is a critical issue in diabetes treatment, especially when applying intensive insulin regimens, to avoid occurrence of hyperglycemia or hypoglycemia and their respective long-term consequences. The important role of accurate BG measurement in combination with a pandemically increasing number of diabetes cases worldwide1 has resulted in an increasing number of BG monitoring (BGM) systems, which have been developed and launched globally.
To ensure appropriate function of the devices, standardization tests were introduced for quality assurance purposes, which also allow for comparable testing of BGM devices. Many clinical trials were conducted– to test compliance with accuracy requirements stipulated by International Organization for Standardization (ISO) 15197:2003.5 However, most investigations only addressed some aspects of accuracy and its consequence on treatment and in a special and controlled laboratory setting for regulatory approval. In consequence, information about compliance of BGM systems with the specifications of the new draft of ISO 15197 (released in 2010)6 is lacking, as well as performance data of devices under daily routine conditions.
Therefore, the goal of the present study was to compare the performance of five recently introduced BGM devices (Accu-Chek® Aviva [Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany], Contour® [Bayer Vital GmbH, Leverkusen, Germany], FreeStyle Freedom Lite® [Abbott Diabetes Care Inc., Alameda, CA], FreeStyle Lite [Abbott Diabetes Care], and OneTouch® UltraEasy® [LifeScan Inc., Milpitas, CA]) directly obtained from the shelf of a German pharmacy with regard to the criteria as set forth in the respective ISO guidelines, when measurements are conducted not in a controlled environment setting but by recently trained patients familiar with the BGM procedures in a clinical setting. Main objectives of the study were the comparison of the mean absolute relative differences (MARDs) and the compliance with the accuracy criteria described in ISO 151975 and the new draft (not yet approved) from 2010.6
Materials and Methods
Study design and Good Clinical Practice conformity
This trial was a randomized, prospective, open, multicenter study that was conducted by an independent contract research organization (IKFE-CRO, Mainz, Germany). The trial consisted of one visit and was conducted at two investigational sites in Germany and one study site in The Netherlands. It was approved by the responsible ethics committees in both countries and conducted in accordance with the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki and the applicable guidelines for Good Clinical Practice, whichever provided the greater protection of the individual. Prior to study participation informed consent was obtained from all patients in writing.
BGM systems
The five BGM systems investigated were as follows: (1) FreeStyle Lite, (2) FreeStyle Freedom Lite, (3) OneTouch UltraEasy, (4) Accu-Chek Aviva, and (5) Contour. The YSI (Yellow Springs, OH) 2300 glucose analyzer (glucose oxidase method) was chosen as the reference method because it is accepted by the regulatory agencies and was available at all study sites.
Study population and study conduct
Patients with type 1 or type 2 diabetes mellitus were enrolled into this trial. Further inclusion criteria were as follows: age between 18 to 75 years, stable BG level at the investigator's discretion, intensive insulin therapy, and experience in self-measurement of BG with multiple daily measurements. Exclusion criteria were as follows: unstable glycemic control (investigator's discretion), lack of legal capacity, pregnancy, blood donation within the last 30 days, and reasons precluding successful study participation (lack of compliance, diagnosis of a progressive/serious disease). The primary objective was the comparison of the MARD values, and secondary objectives were compliance with ISO 15197 and accuracy as assessed by error grid analysis under these clinical conditions with some obvious deviation from the strict ISO protocol (only clinical samples; no laboratory manipulation to very high and very low glucose concentrations; measurements done by the patients themselves, not by healthcare professionals).
Upon enrollment, patients were randomized to use three of the five different BGM systems in a predefined order in each study center using permuted block randomization, stratified by clinical site. This randomization scheme ensured similar usage of the five different BGM systems in a random sequence in each study site. The patients came in fasting and washed their hands prior to performing the measurements. Upon instruction to perform the first BGM, patients had to prick themselves at the fingertip with a commercially available lancing device, to measure BG with two strips in duplicate. All BGM devices and strips were purchased in a local pharmacy (four strip lots per device). Prior to and after the self-test, a healthcare professional collected capillary blood from the fingertip for the laboratory reference measurement with the YSI 2300 Stat Plus glucose analyzer (glucose oxidase method). The YSI 2300 whole blood results were converted to plasma equivalent results, and these results were used for comparison with the test strip results. Patients sequentially repeated all aforementioned steps for the second and third BGM. Hematocrit was measured to assure that hematocrit values of blood samples were within the range specifications of the individual BGM device.
Statistical analysis
Patients were excluded from the analysis if the time delay between the self-measurements and the performance of the YSI measurements exceeded more than 60 min. MARD between the values obtained by an individual BGM versus the YSI reference was calculated for the different BGM systems. MARD is a continuous measure that uses the magnitude of the relative difference for each observation. An analysis of variance was conducted, and the statistical significance of differences between devices was analyzed by unpaired Student's t tests. To account for the multiple comparisons, the significance level was adjusted to 0.0051 for each individual difference.
Consistency of the measurements of individual BGM was analyzed by regression analysis. To obtain slopes and intercepts, regression analyses according to Passing and Bablok were conducted. The correlation coefficient (r) was calculated using the standard regression method of Pearson. To obtain the mean absolute percentage residual, the regression line was used to calculate a predicted value for an individual BGM system measurement from the corresponding YSI 2300 reference value. The difference between the actually measured value and the predicted value yields the absolute percentage residual.
Although the study was not conducted in strict compliance with the ISO 15197 guidelines, the number and percentage of measurements within±15 mg/dL (for glucose concentrations <75 mg/dL) and±20% (for glucose concentrations ≥75 mg/dL) were evaluated in order to examine compliance with accuracy criteria of ISO 15197:2003 (95% of the measurements have to be in the acceptance range).5 Accuracy compliance according to the new draft of the ISO 15197 is defined by percentage of results within±15 mg/dL (for glucose concentrations <100 mg/dL) and within±15% (for glucose concentrations ≥100 mg/dL) and was also assessed and interpreted (acceptance criteria, 95% within these predefined ranges).6 All statistical analyses were performed using SAS® version 9.2 for Windows (SAS Institute, Cary, NC). Tests for the clinical significance of deviating BGM system measurements were performed by means of error grid analyses according to Clarke et al. and Parkes et al.
Results
In total, 501 subjects were enrolled and participated in this study. Forty-eight subjects were excluded from the final analysis of the BGM results for the following reasons: (1) deviation between YSI 2300 duplicate measurements of more than 4% for glucose ≥100 mg/dL or 4 mg/dL for <100 mg/dL, (2) delay of YSI measurements versus BGM system measurements by more than 1 h, (3) hematocrit values outside the range of the system specifications of the corresponding BGM device, (4) results outside the dynamic range of the BGM device, and (5) failure to meet all inclusion/exclusion criteria. Although reason 2 was the major cause of exclusion, 82% of the measurements were completed within 15 min (92.6% within 30 min). Data from the remaining 453 patients were included in the statistical analysis.
Demographics and baseline characteristics
The number of patients was comparable for the three study sites—Münster, Germany (n=160; 35.3%), Neuwied, Germany (n=144; 31.8%), and Nijmegen, the Netherlands (n=149; 32.9%)—with an equal distribution of type 1 (49.4%) and type 2 (50.6%) patients (98.2% white, 57.6% male, age 53±15 years old [mean±SD], glycated hemoglobin 7.8±1.35% [mean±SD]). The level of education of most patients was secondary school (60.2%), followed by university (16.4%), trade school (13.7%), and primary school (8.4%). Prior to this study, most patients (248 of 453; 54.7%) routinely conducted four daily BG measurements. Substantial numbers of patients were conducting five (67 of 453; 14.8%), three (58 of 453; 12.8%), and six (38 of 453; 8.4%) daily measurements, whereas only a few patients measured more frequently (seven times a day [23 of 453; 5.1%]) or less frequently (twice a day [18 of 453; 4.0%] or once a day [one of 453; 0.2%]). Randomization resulted in comparable use of the different devices (FreeStyle Lite, 240 times; FreeStyle Freedom Lite, 244 times; Accu-Chek Aviva, 252 times; Contour, 255 times; and OneTouch UltraEasy, 246 times).
Bias and regression analysis
Mean percentage bias was lowest for the Contour (−0.2%) and the two FreeStyle devices (1% each) and highest for the Accu-Chek Aviva (5.3%) and OneTouch UltraEasy (4.6%; Table 1). The MARD values shown in Table 1, however, demonstrate that the lowest MARD was observed for the FreeStyle devices (FreeStyle Lite, 4.9%; FreeStyle Freedom Lite, 5.5%), and the highest MARD was seen with Contour (9.0%, P<0.0005 vs. both FreeStyle devices) and OneTouch UltraEasy (9.7%, P<0.0005). The 95% confidence intervals (CIs) and SDs increased from the FreeStyle Lite (95% CI, 4.1 to 5.7; SD,±7.5%) to the OneTouch UltraEasy (95% CI, 8.9 to 10.4; SD,±12.1) (Table 2). MARD of the Accu-Chek Aviva was also significantly lower than that of the Contour and OneTouch UltraEasy.
Table 1.
Mean Absolute Difference and Mean Absolute Relative Difference Between Measurements with the Different Blood Glucose Meters and the YSI 2300
Mean bias | MARD | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Blood glucose meter | mg/dL | % | % | 95% CI | SD (%) | Subjects (n) | Measurements (n) |
FreeStyle Lite FreeStyle | 0.8 | 1.0 | 4.9 | 4.1 to 5.7 | 7.5 | 240 | 480 |
Freedom Lite | 0.3 | 1.0 | 5.5 | 4.8 to 6.3 | 8.5 | 244 | 488 |
Accu-Chek Aviva | 7.2 | 5.3 | 6.8 | 6.1 to 7.6 | 7.5 | 252 | 504 |
Contour | −1.2 | −0.2 | 9.0 | 8.3 to 9.8 | 12.0 | 255 | 510 |
OneTouch UltraEasy | 6.3 | 4.6 | 9.7 | 8.9 to 10.4 | 12.1 | 246 | 492 |
CI, confidence interval; MARD, mean absolute relative difference; n, number.
Table 2.
Analysis of Variance of the Difference in Mean Absolute Bias on a Percentage Basis
Blood glucose meter comparison | Difference in mean absolute bias (%) | Confidence interval | P value |
---|---|---|---|
FreeStyle Lite vs. FreeStyle Freedom Lite | −0.7 | (−2.2, 0.9) | 0.2470 |
FreeStyle Lite vs. Accu-Chek Aviva | −2.0 | (−3.5, −0.4) | 0.0005* |
FreeStyle Lite vs. Contour | −4.2 | (−5.7, −2.6) | <0.0001* |
FreeStyle Lite vs. OneTouch UltraEasy | −4.8 | (−6.4, −3.2) | <0.0001* |
FreeStyle Freedom Lite vs. Accu-Chek Aviva | −1.3 | (−2.9, 0.3) | 0.0191 |
FreeStyle Freedom Lite vs. Contour | −3.5 | (−5.1, −1.9) | <0.0001* |
FreeStyle Freedom Lite vs. OneTouch UltraEasy | −4.1 | (−5.7, −2.5) | <0.0001* |
Accu-Chek Aviva vs. Contour | −2.2 | (−3.7, −0.6) | <0.0001* |
Accu-Chek Aviva vs. OneTouch UltraEasy | −2.8 | (−4.4, −1.2) | <0.0001* |
Contour vs. OneTouch UltraEasy | −0.6 | (−2.2, 0.9) | 0.2658 |
Regression analyses were conducted for all BGM systems versus the YSI 2300 reference method. The parameters shown in Table 3 demonstrate very good correlations of all BGM devices with the YSI 2300 measurements.
Table 3.
Regression Analysis of the Values of the Indicated Blood Glucose Meters Versus the YSI 2300 Reference Method
95% CI | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Blood glucose meter | Slope | Intercept | Slope | Intercept | r | Mean absolute % residual | Mean paired % CV | Subjects (n) | Measurements (n) |
FreeStyle Lite | 0.98 | 2.5 | 0.97 to 0.99 | 0.6 to 4.2 | 0.985 | 4.7 | 2.5 | 240 | 480 |
FreeStyle Freedom Lite | 0.98 | 3.6 | 0.97 to 0.99 | 1.3 to 5.6 | 0.985 | 5.3 | 3.1 | 244 | 488 |
Accu-Chek Aviva | 1.01 | 4.8 | 1.00 to 1.03 | 2.9 to 6.5 | 0.989 | 5.1 | 2.9 | 252 | 504 |
Contour | 0.98 | 0.6 | 0.96 to 1.01 | −2.2 to 3.7 | 0.966 | 9.1 | 5.1 | 255 | 510 |
OneTouch UltraEasy | 1.04 | 0.5 | 1.01 to 1.06 | −2.8 to 3.6 | 0.974 | 8.7 | 4.5 | 246 | 492 |
CI, confidence interval; CV, coefficient of variation; r, correlation coefficient.
Accuracy according to ISO 15197:2003 and its new draft of 2010
This study was not done in strict compliance with ISO 15197, which requires a specific distribution of the glucose values in predefined ranges. Also, no artificial manipulation of samples was done to achieve very high or very low glucose levels. However, to study accuracy of BG measurements in this routine clinical setting according to ISO 15197:2003, BGM readings were plotted against the results of the YSI reference measurements as shown in Figure 1. Table 4 shows the number of readings within different ranges of deviation for each BGM device (<5, <10, and <15 mg/dL). All measurements <75 mg/dL with FreeStyle Lite were within±15 mg/dL; by contrast, only 83% of the measurements with OneTouch UltraEasy were within this acceptance range. Accuracy of BG readings ≥75 mg/dL was analyzed for four ranges (within ±5%, ±10%, ±15%, and ±20%). FreeStyle Lite performed best with the highest percentage of values within all four categories (Table 4); the BGM system with the lowest number of readings within these four categories was the OneTouch UltraEasy. Combining the data obtained for±15 mg/dL and±20% yields the values required for assessment of the ISO 15197:2003 requirements. It is evident from Table 4 that both FreeStyle devices as well as the Accu-Chek Aviva complied with the ISO requirements, in contrast to the Contour and OneTouch UltraEasy, which yielded less than 95% values within the acceptance ranges.
Measurement bias of capillary blood glucose obtained with hand-held blood glucose monitoring systems versus the laboratory reference device YSI 2300: (A) FreeStyle Lite, (B), FreeStyle Freedom Lite, (C) Accu-Chek Aviva, (D) Contour, and (E) OneTouch UltraEasy. The solid lines represent±15 mg/dL for glucose concentrations <75 mg/dL and±20% for glucose concentrations ≥75 mg/dL.
Table 4.
Accuracy and ISO 15197:2003 Compliance of the Individual Blood Glucose Meters Versus the YSI Reference Device
Both blood glucose levels within | Blood glucose <75 mg/dL within | Blood glucose ≥75 mg/dL within | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Blood glucose meter | Compliance with ISO accuracy requirements | ±5%/5 mg/dL | ±10%/10 mg/dL | ±15%/15 mg/dL | ±20%/15 mg/dL | ±5 mg/dL | ±10 mg/dL | ±15 mg/dL | ±5% | ±10% | ±15% | ±20% |
FreeStyle Lite | Yes | 325/480 (68%) | 446/480 (93%) | 469/480 (98%) | 474/480 (99%) | 30/48 (63%) | 45/48 (94%) | 48/48 (100%) | 295/432 (68%) | 401/432 (93%) | 421/432 (97%) | 426/432 (99%) |
FreeStyle Freedom Lite | Yes | 303/488 (62%) | 437/488 (90%) | 465/488 (95%) | 476/488 (98%) | 30/52 (58%) | 45/52 (87%) | 47/52 (90%) | 273/436 (63%) | 392/436 (90%) | 418/436 (96%) | 429/436 (98%) |
Accu-Chek Aviva | Yes | 237/504 (47%) | 403/504 (80%) | 470/504 (93%) | 489/504 (97%) | 13/40 (33%) | 32/40 (80%) | 38/40 (95%) | 224/464 (48%) | 371/464 (80%) | 432/464 (93%) | 451/464 (97%) |
Contour | No | 196/510 (38%) | 339/510 (66%) | 433/510 (85%) | 471/510 (92%) | 20/44 (45%) | 31/44 (70%) | 41/44 (93%) | 176/466 (38%) | 308/466 (66%) | 392/466 (84%) | 430/466 (92%) |
OneTouch UltraEasy | No | 175/492 (36%) | 313/492 (64%) | 405/492 (82%) | 448/492 (91%) | 18/42 (43%) | 27/42 (64%) | 35/42 (83%) | 157/450 (35%) | 286/450 (64%) | 370/450 (82%) | 413/450 (92%) |
Data are number of within measurements versus the total number of measurements (respective percentage).
ISO, International Organization for Standardization.
Evaluation of the data according to the new draft of the ISO 151976 resulted in comparable results (Table 5) with one major exception: only the combined values (within±15% and±15 mg/dL) of the FreeStyle Lite and FreeStyle Freedom Lite achieved the ISO requirements of ≥95% of the measured values within the acceptable range in comparison with the reference device.
Table 5.
Accuracy and ISO 15197 Fulfillment of the Individual Blood Glucose Monitoring Systems Using the Glucose Threshold of 100 mg/dL Required According to the New Draft of ISO 15197 of 2010
All blood glucose levels within | Blood glucose <100 mg/dL within | Blood glucose ≥100 mg/dL within | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Blood glucose meter | Fulfillment of ISO accuracy requirements | ±5%/5 mg/dL | ±10%/10 mg/dL | ±15%/15 mg/dL | ±5 mg/dL | ±10 mg/dL | ±15 mg/dL | ±5 % | ±10 % | ±15% |
FreeStyle Lite | Yes | 330/480 (69%) | 447/480 (93%) | 471/480 (98%) | 70/104 (67%) | 96/104 (92%) | 102/104 (98%) | 260/376 (69%) | 351/376 (93%) | 369/376 (98%) |
FreeStyle Freedom Lite | Yes | 305/488 (63%) | 437/488 (90%) | 466/488 (95%) | 63/104 (61%) | 95/104 (91%) | 98/104 (94%) | 242/384 (63%) | 342/384 (89%) | 368/384 (96%) |
Accu-Chek Aviva | No | 238/504 (47%) | 404/504 (80%) | 475/504 (94%) | 39/94 (41%) | 68/94 (72%) | 90/94 (96%) | 199/410 (49%) | 336/410 (82%) | 385/410 (94%) |
Contour | No | 197/510 (39%) | 346/510 (68%) | 439/510 (86%) | 40/120 (33%) | 71/120 (59%) | 98/120 (82%) | 157/390 (40%) | 275/390 (71%) | 341/390 (87%) |
OneTouch UltraEasy | No | 177/492 (36%) | 313/492 (64%) | 408/492 (83%) | 33/94 (35%) | 59/94 (63%) | 78/94 (83%) | 144/398 (36%) | 254/398 (64%) | 330/398 (83%) |
Data are number of within measurements versus total number of measurements (respective percentage).
ISO, International Organization for Standardization.
Error grid analyses
Results of the Clarke and Parkes Error Grid analysis are graphically displayed for the FreeStyle Lite in Figure 2. Table 6 shows a numerical comparison of these two approaches for the individual BGM systems. Using the Clarke Error Grid analysis, the frequency of values falling into Zone A was highest for the FreeStyle Lite (98.8%) and lowest for the OneTouch UltraEasy (90.4%). The FreeStyle Lite yielded only values in Zones A and B, whereas the other four BGM systems produced few values in Zone D (OneTouch UltraEasy, 1.6%; FreeStyle Freedom Lite, 1.2%; Accu-Chek Aviva, 0.4%; and Contour, 0.4%). Similar results were obtained by means of the Parkes Error Grid analysis.
Analysis of clinical significance of measuring inaccuracies of individual blood glucose monitoring systems by (A) Clarke and (B) Parkes Error Grid analyses. Results are shown for the FreeStyle Lite device.
Table 6.
Stratification of Paired Values Within the Indicated Zones According to the Clarke and Parkes Error Grid Analyses
Error grid zone | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | B | C | D | E | |||||||
Method, blood glucose meter | n | % | n | % | n | % | n | % | n | % | Total n |
Clarke | |||||||||||
FreeStyle Lite | 474 | 98.8 | 6 | 1.3 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 480 |
FreeStyle Freedom Lite | 475 | 97.3 | 7 | 1.4 | 0 | 0.0 | 6 | 1.2 | 0 | 0.0 | 488 |
Accu-Chek Aviva | 487 | 96.6 | 15 | 3.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 2 | 0.4 | 0 | 0.0 | 504 |
Contour | 471 | 92.4 | 37 | 7.3 | 0 | 0.0 | 2 | 0.4 | 0 | 0.0 | 510 |
OneTouch Ultra Easy | 445 | 90.4 | 39 | 7.9 | 0 | 0.0 | 8 | 1.6 | 0 | 0.0 | 492 |
Parkes | |||||||||||
FreeStyle Lite | 477 | 99.4 | 3 | 0.6 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 480 |
FreeStyle Freedom Lite | 480 | 98.4 | 7 | 1.4 | 1 | 0.2 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 488 |
Accu-Chek Aviva | 498 | 98.8 | 6 | 1.2 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 504 |
Contour | 486 | 95.3 | 24 | 4.7 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 510 |
OneTouch UltraEasy | 463 | 94.1 | 29 | 5.9 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0.0 | 492 |
Adverse events
Four adverse events occurred during this study. All were mild events of hypoglycemia, which were not related to the study devices.
Discussion and Conclusion
The study was designed to minimize selection bias by purchasing the BGM systems directly from the pharmacy. Four lots of test strips were tested with each BGM system in the study to ensure representative performance would be obtained. To evaluate actual patient use, all BGM system tests were done by the diabetes patients, the intended users, and not by trained healthcare professionals. Subjects participating in this study were between 18 and 75 years, had different levels of education, and conducted one to seven or more daily BG measurements and thus are a representative group of potential users.
MARD is a continuous measure that makes use of the magnitude of the percentage bias of each observation. Therefore MARD is correlated with the ISO accuracy measurement. Dichotomization involved in the calculation of percentage within can be useful to understand clinical impact (e.g., Consensus Error Grid analysis), but also leads to loss of information. As performance improves, a single MARD measure is sensitive to differences in accuracy and precision; percentage within becomes insensitive to changes in accuracy and precision. Therefore, additional calculations with tighter criteria are required. Evaluation of the average difference between individual BGM systems and the YSI 2300 reference yielded results that correspond to those obtained regarding analysis of the ISO 15197 compliance, as is reflected by the lowest MARD values of the FreeStyle Lite and FreeStyle Freedom Lite. The highest MARD values by the Contour and OneTouch UltraEasy are in line with the results from analysis of ISO compliance. The only device that achieved 100% of values within Zones A and B using both types of error grid analyses when operated by end users was the FreeStyle Lite. Mean absolute percentage residual was also lowest for the FreeStyle Lite.
Under these daily routine conditions and without investigating very high or very low values, the accuracy specifications defined by ISO 15197:2003 were met by three BGM devices tested (FreeStyle Lite, FreeStyle Freedom Lite, and Accu-Chek Aviva). These results are in line with former results1,10, showing compliance with ISO 15197:2003 requirements by these devices in a more controlled test environment. Under more controlled conditions, the OneTouch UltraEasy and Contour also fulfilled the specifications,,10 whereas they failed to do so in our study.
Applying the more strict requirements defined by the new draft of ISO 15197 revealed the FreeStyle Lite and FreeStyle Freedom Lite as the only devices complying with these potential new standard specifications even in a more clinical routine setting. Regardless of the version of ISO 15197 applied, the Contour and OneTouch UltraEasy failed the accuracy criteria in this routine study setting.
Our study has several limitations, which need to be considered before drawing conclusions with clinical relevance. First of all, and as mentioned above, the investigation was not performed in strict compliance with the protocol suggested by the ISO 15197 guideline, as our primary objective was MARD in comparison with the YSI 2300. Artificially prepared very high and very low samples were not tested, as we were interested in the clinical accuracy when measurements were performed by patients. In turn, we collected many more data points than suggested by ISO. Second, the Accu-Chek device is based on a hexokinase method, whereas we used the glucose oxidase–based YSI analyzer as the reference and comparator method. This may have contributed to the differences observed between the FreeStyle devices and Accu-Chek Aviva with respect to MARD, as negative biases of approximately 3–8% have been described previously between YSI and hexokinase-based reference methods., As such, different reference methods might introduce a deviation of the values that is not caused by the device itself. This effect might have contributed to the relative high mean bias (Table 1) of the Accu-Chek Aviva (hexokinase) in comparison with the YSI (glucose oxidase)-calibrated BG meters and subsequently might influence the interpretation of the results. However, these limitations do not apply to the other comparator meters.
In summary, using several parameters to assess the reliability of BGM devices, the FreeStyle Freedom Lite and especially the FreeStyle Lite were shown to be the most accurate and reliable BG meters in our clinical setting in comparison with the YSI glucose oxidase reference method in the hands of the end user population, with study materials obtained through regular supply channels.
Windows vista theme mac. Oct 02, 2017 Windows Vista Themes for Windows 10 Themes/Visual Style for Windows 10.14393, Anniversary Update and Windows 10.15063, Creators Update, (Theme also changes cursors and desktop icons as well as visual style.).
Acknowledgments
This study was funded by Abbott Diabetes Care. Abbott Diabetes Care was involved in the design of the study and performed the statistical analysis. The IKFE in Mainz was responsible for obtaining all study materials, managed the study, and reviewed the statistical analysis. The manuscript was prepared by the authors. Abbott Diabetes Care was permitted to review and comment on the manuscript, but the final decision on the content was exclusively retained by the authors.
Author Disclosure Statement
C.T, T.F., and A.P. have received travel support, speaker fees, and research grants from Abbott Medisense. H.P., T.B., V.S., and M.G. declare no competing financial interests.
References
Freestyle Freedom Lite Error Codes
If a glucose meter could make cappuccino, I’d be all over that.
That's what I expected with Abbott Diabetes Care’s newest meter, the FreeStyle Precision Neo, launched here in the States earlier this Spring. But sadly, the meter doesn’t deliver on the promise of delivering my metaphoric cappuccino. It hardly even brews drip coffee, if we’re keeping to the caffeine analogy.
An international version of this meter has been available outside the U.S. for more than a year, going by the FreeStyle Optimum Neo name, and the FreeStyle Precision Neo finally made it to the American market in mid-April following FDA regulatory approval last fall. Since both go by the “Neo” name, you might think this Americanized version would offer the same features as its international cousin does -- checking glucose, testing blood ketones, tracking insulin, and warning us of high or low patterns.
But that’s not the case, unfortunately. The Precision Neo is as skinny as a supermodel and looks pretty good for a glucose meter, but that’s about all it has going for it. Once again, as it has done in the past, Abbott has castrated an innovative device for the American market by eliminating the bells and whistles that made it special.
The reason, according to Abbott, is by design: they’re marketing this to people with diabetes in the States who don’t want to fuss with insurance, or worry about excessive copays or high costs of test strips. The lower-cost Precision Neo goes for $22 to $28 for the meter itself, and the strips range from $14 to $17 for a box of 25.
Of course, lower-cost meters and strips have been around in some stores for a long time, but traditionally they haven’t been from the big-name brands. Not until recently, that is. With this Precision Neo meter targeted at the low-cost crowd, Abbott joins JnJ-owned Lifescan that also recently launched a “back to basics” meter of its own. That OneTouch Verio isn’t aimed at sidestepping insurance like this new Precision Neo, but it also removed the more innovative features found in the Verio IQ and VerioSync line in order to target simplicity.
We get the need for affordability and simplicity for meters and diabetes supplies, but is there seriously a need for these meters that really don’t offer anything new and actually take away some of the features we’ve come to expect from contemporary meters? What are these companies thinking?
The Precision Neo arrived at my door a few weeks ago, and I had the chance to play around with it and see what it does offer.
Sorry, Sans Ketones
When I first heard Neo was coming to our shores, I was looking forward to a new blood ketone testing platform, as I didn’t realize American Neo had been castrated. I still didn’t get it when my review sample arrived without blood ketone strips. I figured they just forgot to send me some for testing, so I emailed Jessica Sachariason, the Public Affairs Manager of Abbott Diabetes to ask for some. Her reply? “The FreeStyle Precision Neo meter is intended to be used with FreeStyle Precision Neo blood glucose test strips only.”
Turns out, the company line on this is that our USA market is unique due to insurance premium costs, the rising price tag of employee health claims, and the burden of medical claim paperwork. As a result, this super-simple meter scratches the itch mandated by our system.
“Abbott identified a gap in the overall segment of over-the-counter blood glucose systems being sold in the U.S. without a prescription -- many of the current offerings are lesser known brands and may have different standard of accuracy,” Sachariason wrote via email. “To address this need, Abbott launched the FreeStyle Precision Neo at a lower cost but without sacrificing the high standard of accuracy that is used within all of Abbott's FreeStyle family of products.”
I didn’t ask exactly how deleting already-existing features makes the meter so much cheaper to target the “low cost, no insurance needed” market segment. But based on past history asking these questions – anyone remember our coverage of the FreeStyle Insulinx meter a few years ago about Abbott taking away the insulin calculator? -- it seems like the answers would be corporate-speak anyway and wouldn’t tell the real story: that it’s not regulatory rules limiting these devices, but the Abbott decision-making to not even try and get them approved in the States.
Very disappointing, because again it feels like we finally got access to a much-desired cappuccino maker but instead it only gives us coffee. And decaf, at that.
Even hearing that official Abbott response, I wasn’t ready to give up on my precious ketone testing just yet. I wondered if they really altered the meter, or just told us so. Maybe there was a workaround. To find out, I pissed away $8 and stuck one of my precious Abbott blood ketone strips into the Neo, just to see what would happen..
It didn’t work. I got a very large and clear Error 7 message, which means the strip is damaged, used, or the meter doesn’t recognize it. Because it's been castrated, all right.
((Sigh))
Hands On
Jojo fashion show game download. So, what does this Neo actually give us?
It’s flat, I’ll give it that. So flat that I kept losing it in the clutter on my desk. The marketing people say it’s thinner than a AAA battery. It’s lightweight without seeming ticky-tacky. It has a touch screen that actually seems to like my fingertips and works. So far, so good.
But what I love most about the Neo is also what I hate the most: A beautiful E-Ink screen (à la Kindle PaperWhite), which as far as I know is the first time this type of technology has been used in a glucometer. The problem is, it’s only beautiful half the time -- and the wrong half at that.
When you scroll back through the meter’s 1,000-number memory, the test results are displayed with black numbers on a white background. It’s amazing. Clean, sharp, and easy to read in dim light and full sunlight alike. But when you actually test your blood sugar, the screen displays as a reversal, with white numbers on a black field (more of a battle-ship grey field) that ends up low-contrast and hard to read in any light.
And no, in case you’re wondering: this Precision Neo doesn’t have a backlight, has no test strip port light for checking in the dark, and if you don’t get enough blood on the strip the first time, it only gives you 5 seconds to reapply before an error message pops up.
Bottom line: the testing results most PWDs never look at are easy to read -- the best I’ve ever seen in a BGL meter -- but the ones we need to see are hard to read. What moron set that up?
More Devja Vu
All right, so all USA Neo does is test blood sugar. How well does it perform?
I took out a strip to test it for myself.
Wait a minute. We’ve seen this blood glucose test strip before, haven’t we? Oh, yes. I remember now, the National Geographic Society found some of these when excavating Cro-Magnon caves in France. Yeah, this test strip has been around that long. At least it looks like the originals: Individually foil wrapped, each attached to the next in a perforated ribbon. For the sake of good science, I stuck one in my old Precision Xtra meter that I carry to check blood ketones, and got yet another error message, so maybe it just looks like a clone of its ancestor.
Of course the real problem is that the strips don’t seem all that great at doing their job.
The official product data tells us it meets the existing FDA standards for test strip accuracy, coming in at within 20% of a lab glucose test every time, when blood sugars are 75 mg/dL or lower. When BGs are above that range, the strips tend to be within that accuracy range 99% of the time.
But for me, it didn’t seem as good as what I’m already using. I compared the Neo strips to my WaveSense Presto and found they always ran low (no surprise given the Neo doesn’t
The reincarnated FreeStyle Precision Neo test strips require .6 micro-liters of blood on each strip, which isn’t much but it constitutes a boatload compared to other FreeStyle meters and pretty much any other strip on the planet.
What’s sadly ironic is that Abbott was the company that broke down technological barriers back in the day, introducing the 3/10th microliter blood sample with their FreeStyle Flash. But in the 5+ years since that meter was discontinued, I guess all the folks who’d developed the Flash left the company and went to work for other tech businesses like Apple that were improving gadgets and doing new things.
To their credit, I will say the included FreeStyle Lancing Device II is a fingerpoker that I actually like a lot. It’s smallish, seems robustly built, can be used one-handed, has a ring of nerve-numbing nubs on the snout that ensures a painless lancing experience, and it does not use a special or propriety lancing needle. So, there’s that – but the lancing device itself isn’t really what Abbott is marketing, is it?
‘Skip the Copay’ Marketing Madness
Abbott is going full court press to push this new product, including a multi-media video campaign. Since the meter has absolutely no features aside from the basic function, I believe Abbott’s using what I tend to think of as smoke and mirrors to generate sales. The new advertising campaign is built around the tagline: “Skip the copay.”
The idea: Just pay the low price of the meter and/or strips in the store, without a prescription, you're on your way. No need for high copays or fussing with savings cards. Avoid any insurance coverage issues or medical claim processes that are often needed when buying costly name-brand test strips off-the-shelf. Hey, perfect for those PWDs on a budget, right?
Abbott is trying to make their end-run around the health plans sound like a good deal and a huge boon to PWDs, but it’s simply not true. I ran the math. The strips are sold online via Wal-Mart, CVS, and the Abbott store.
- Per strip, Wal-Mart has the best price at 39.9 cents per strip ($19.94 per box of 50)
- CVS costs 44 cents each ($21.99 per box of 50)
- Abbott charges more still, at 48 cents per strip ($24 for a box of 50)
If you’re a PWD testing four times a day, the lowest you’d have to pay out of pocket is $48.55 each month.
Comparing to other Abbott strips available, you'd pay roughly $88 for a box of 50 of their FreeStyle Lite strips; and the costs are just as high, if not higher, for the same amount of other brand-name strips. Other low-cost strips like the Wal-Mart ReliOn strips that I use come in at 18 cents a strip or a total of $9 for a box of 50. And when you talk accuracy and reliability on many of these products, it’s often in the eye of the diabetic beholder doing the fingerstick test.
Bottom Line
So was this meter even necessary? Fully featured, hell yeah. Gutted and basic? I don’t know why they wasted their time. And ours. Don’t we already have enough meters that just test blood sugar and nothing else? I want the ketone testing. I want the data tracking algorithm, the insulin dose tracking feature, and the rest. The name-brand doesn’t make the difference to me.
Freestyle Lite Er3
If I am trying to pinch pennies on the glucose meter and test strips, I may be more closely looking at these newer “back to basics” meters. Maybe not everyone wants the same bells and whistles that some of us have come to expect from new glucometers. But there are already options on the table, and those off-brand meters don’t try to sneak in under the radar by keeping the name but not offering the features that go along with it.
Freestyle Freedom Lite Error Code 3
Getting back to my metaphor, it feels like I'm going into the store to buy a new cappuccino maker. I see a brand that I know makes good cappuccino. But then when I get it home, I realize it doesn't do what I thought it did based on the model's familiar name. Instead, it only makes cappuccino for customers abroad, while here it only makes coffee. And I don't just want coffee, especially day-old coffee. Not when I had my heart set on cappuccino.