Business Day

Diabetics get sweet deal with hi-tech monitor

• The FreeStyle Libre device has made it easy for Type 1 sufferers and the company to gauge their glucose levels

- Michelle Cortez

When Abbott Laboratori­es rolled out a device in Europe to help diabetics measure their glucose levels without having to prick a finger, it included a novel ask for patients: would they allow the company to collect their data to help guide care? The company never imagined it would be sparking an informatio­n obsession.

More than 50,000 people who used the FreeStyle Libre from 2014 to 2016 granted the company access, yielding 409million data points. The results provide an unparallel­ed glimpse into the ebb and flow of testing in a group of people whose lives — and their limbs — depend on these efforts.

The Libre is a waterproof button the size of a coin that sits on the outside of the upper arm. It houses a tiny needle-shaped sensor that rests just under the skin, continuous­ly measuring glucose levels in the interstiti­al fluid that bathes the cells.

Users hold a companion device, or an Android phone, above the sensor to get an immediate reading; an arrow indicates if levels are rising or falling. The informatio­n can be uploaded to Abbott.

FreeStyle Libre users scanned their sensors an average 16 times a day; some exceeded 45. The results blew past traditiona­l testing with blood taken from a fingertip, which for Type 1 diabetics is recommende­d four to eight times a day — a regimen that some find taxing.

The Abbott analysis found those who tested the most had the best glucose control. That’s a key goal for treating diabetes, a chronic condition in millions of people across the world.

It is marked by a deficiency of insulin, a hormone that converts blood glucose into energy. If glucose climbs too high, it can damage organs such as the kidneys, and also the hands and feet, leading to amputation­s; if it dips too low, it can cause a diabetic coma — or death.

Adrian Long, a 59-year-old semiretire­d teacher of Lancashire, northwest of London, admits he let his blood sugar run a bit high for years. The teacher wanted to avoid the complicati­ons of going too low, which even at nondeadly levels can cause shakiness, confusion, headaches and fatigue.

Long says the FreeStyle Libre lets him “micromanag­e” his condition. An avid gardener, he measures his glucose about 20 times a day, he says, sometimes more when he is physically active, such as when he is planting vegetables.

“With the Libre, there is no limit to the number of scans you

USERS HOLD A DEVICE SUCH AS AN ANDROID PHONE ABOVE THE SENSOR TO GET AN IMMEDIATE READING.

can do,” says Long, who pays about £100 a month for the sensor, which must be replaced every two weeks.

“Over the two years I’ve been using it, there has been a significan­t reduction in my A1C reading,” he says, referring to a widely used glucose gauge.

Simplicity is a key feature of the device and is one of the main reasons that Abbott was able to gather the amount of data it did, says Joel Goldsmith, senior director of digital platforms for the diabetes division.

The specifics for each patient, including age and gender, were removed from the files, and the medical informatio­n was aggregated before it was analysed. “The only way you get a large volume of data is making the process effortless for the user,” he says. “The act requires very little of them, and they are willing to do it frequently. It’s a virtuous circle.”

One of the greatest pitfalls for any monitoring device is collecting data that goes unused, says Jared Watkin, senior vicepresid­ent for diabetes care.

“It’s not just getting the informatio­n; you have to do something with it,” he says. “That’s playing out. We give data to people, and they can immediatel­y act on it.”

It was the FreeStyle Libre’s minimalist design that first attracted Larissa Zimberoff, a 45-year-old freelance journalist who writes about food and technology. A Type 1 diabetic, she learned about the device two years ago while researchin­g a piece for Wired magazine. “It’s not on my stomach, it’s not this pager-looking thing,” she says. “It’s elegant. It’s small. It’s unobtrusiv­e. I wanted it.”

There was a problem. Zimberoff is an American living in New York, and the FreeStyle Libre is not approved for use in the US. She started importing it from Italy, thanks to an accommodat­ing friend.

She has been paying $400 every three months for the past year for the sensors, which are expected to get US Food and Drug Administra­tion approval later this year.

The repeated checks are not always helpful, and some users have reported being overwhelme­d by the data. Those who log in to the system on their computers can access seven different reports on their blood sugar, tracking readings and patterns over time.

Zimberoff says diabetics need better insight into their health than a static data point that is created by a traditiona­l finger stick.

“The beauty of using this flash meter is that I know my trends,” she says. “Diabetes isn’t something you can turn off. It’s not something that you cannot pay attention to.”

THE ONLY WAY YOU GET A LARGE VOLUME OF DATA IS BY MAKING THE PROCESS EFFORTLESS FOR THE USER

 ?? /Supplied ?? Lifestyle fit: The FreeStyle Libre glucose meter has a minimalist design that its users find attractive.
/Supplied Lifestyle fit: The FreeStyle Libre glucose meter has a minimalist design that its users find attractive.

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