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The objective of the study is to determine whether patients with poor glycemic control can improve metabolic control using the real-time values of the Guardian® RT compared to conventional self-monitoring blood glucose finger-sticks.
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Finger-stick based self-testing (SBGM), as well as diagnostic continuous glucose monitoring (CGMS®) allow diabetic patients to find a balance between the two hyper- and hypoglycemic extremes. Nevertheless, there are still patients who fail to achieve good control due to fear of hypoglycemia, or who underestimate post-prandial hyperglycemias.
The Guardian® RT Telemetered Glucose Monitoring System is indicated for continuous or periodic monitoring of real-time interstitial blood glucose values and low/high blood glucose alarms (when pre-set levels are reached) in persons with diabetes mellitus. The glucose values calculated by the device will be used to trigger hypo- and hyperglycemia alerts and will be displayed every 5 minutes. The Guardian® RT stores up to 21 days of data.
The overall primary objective of the study is to determine whether patients with poor glycemic control as evidenced by HbA1c > 8.1% can achieve improved metabolic control using the real-time values of the Guardian® RT compared to conventional self-monitoring blood glucose finger-sticks (control group) after 12 weeks of continuous use.
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162 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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