Diabetes & Metabolism Journal (Nov 2022)

Comparison of Laser and Conventional Lancing Devices for Blood Glucose Measurement Conformance and Patient Satisfaction in Diabetes Mellitus

  • Jung A Kim,
  • Min Jeong Park,
  • Eyun Song,
  • Eun Roh,
  • So Young Park,
  • Da Young Lee,
  • Jaeyoung Kim,
  • Ji Hee Yu,
  • Ji A Seo,
  • Kyung Mook Choi,
  • Sei Hyun Baik,
  • Hye Jin Yoo,
  • Nan Hee Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4093/dmj.2021.0293
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 46, no. 6
pp. 936 – 940

Abstract

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Self-monitoring of capillary blood glucose is important for controlling diabetes. Recently, a laser lancing device (LMT-1000) that can collect capillary blood without skin puncture was developed. We enrolled 150 patients with type 1 or 2 diabetes mellitus. Blood sampling was performed on the same finger on each hand using the LMT-1000 or a conventional lancet. The primary outcome was correlation between glucose values using the LMT-1000 and that using a lancet. And we compared the pain and satisfaction of the procedures. The capillary blood sampling success rates with the LMT-1000 and lancet were 99.3% and 100%, respectively. There was a positive correlation (r=0.974, P<0.001) between mean blood glucose levels in the LMT-1000 (175.8±63.0 mg/dL) and conventional lancet samples (172.5±63.6 mg/dL). LMT-1000 reduced puncture pain by 75.0% and increased satisfaction by 80.0% compared to a lancet. We demonstrated considerable consistency in blood glucose measurements between samples from the LMT-1000 and a lancet, but improved satisfaction and clinically significant pain reduction were observed with the LMT-1000 compared to those with a lancet.

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