Interactive Journal of Medical Research (Jul 2024)

Consequences of Data Loss on Clinical Decision-Making in Continuous Glucose Monitoring: Retrospective Cohort Study

  • Niala den Braber,
  • Carlijn I R Braem,
  • Miriam M R Vollenbroek-Hutten,
  • Hermie J Hermens,
  • Thomas Urgert,
  • Utku S Yavuz,
  • Peter H Veltink,
  • Gozewijn D Laverman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/50849
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13
p. e50849

Abstract

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BackgroundThe impact of missing data on individual continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) data is unknown but can influence clinical decision-making for patients. ObjectiveWe aimed to investigate the consequences of data loss on glucose metrics in individual patient recordings from continuous glucose monitors and assess its implications on clinical decision-making. MethodsThe CGM data were collected from patients with type 1 and 2 diabetes using the FreeStyle Libre sensor (Abbott Diabetes Care). We selected 7-28 days of 24 hours of continuous data without any missing values from each individual patient. To mimic real-world data loss, missing data ranging from 5% to 50% were introduced into the data set. From this modified data set, clinical metrics including time below range (TBR), TBR level 2 (TBR2), and other common glucose metrics were calculated in the data sets with and that without data loss. Recordings in which glucose metrics deviated relevantly due to data loss, as determined by clinical experts, were defined as expert panel boundary error (εEPB). These errors were expressed as a percentage of the total number of recordings. The errors for the recordings with glucose management indicator <53 mmol/mol were investigated. ResultsA total of 84 patients contributed to 798 recordings over 28 days. With 5%-50% data loss for 7-28 days recordings, the εEPB varied from 0 out of 798 (0.0%) to 147 out of 736 (20.0%) for TBR and 0 out of 612 (0.0%) to 22 out of 408 (5.4%) recordings for TBR2. In the case of 14-day recordings, TBR and TBR2 episodes completely disappeared due to 30% data loss in 2 out of 786 (0.3%) and 32 out of 522 (6.1%) of the cases, respectively. However, the initial values of the disappeared TBR and TBR2 were relatively small (<0.1%). In the recordings with glucose management indicator <53 mmol/mol the εEPB was 9.6% for 14 days with 30% data loss. ConclusionsWith a maximum of 30% data loss in 14-day CGM recordings, there is minimal impact of missing data on the clinical interpretation of various glucose metrics. Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT05584293; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05584293