Accurate Post-Calibration Predictions for Noninvasive Glucose Measurements in People Using Confocal Raman Spectroscopy
- PMID: 36877178
- PMCID: PMC10043934
- DOI: 10.1021/acssensors.2c02756
Accurate Post-Calibration Predictions for Noninvasive Glucose Measurements in People Using Confocal Raman Spectroscopy
Abstract
In diabetes prevention and care, invasiveness of glucose measurement impedes efficient therapy and hampers the identification of people at risk. Lack of calibration stability in non-invasive technology has confined the field to short-term proof of principle. Addressing this challenge, we demonstrate the first practical use of a Raman-based and portable non-invasive glucose monitoring device used for at least 15 days following calibration. In a home-based clinical study involving 160 subjects with diabetes, the largest of its kind to our knowledge, we find that the measurement accuracy is insensitive to age, sex, and skin color. A subset of subjects with type 2 diabetes highlights promising real-life results with 99.8% of measurements within A + B zones in the consensus error grid and a mean absolute relative difference of 14.3%. By overcoming the problem of calibration stability, we remove the lingering uncertainty about the practical use of non-invasive glucose monitoring, boding a new, non-invasive era in diabetes monitoring.
Keywords: calibration stability; diabetes; in vivo Raman spectroscopy; multivariate data analysis; non-invasive glucose monitoring; portable sensor; tissue diagnostics.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors declare the following competing financial interest(s): A. Pors and A. Weber are inventors on a patent application related to this work filed by RSP Systems (GB2116869.5, 23 Nov. 2021). A. Weber is an inventor of a patent filed by RSP Systems related to this work (US9,380,942, 07 Jan 2010). A. Pors, A. Philipps, R. Inglev, K. G. Rasmussen, M. C. Gerstenberg, and A. Weber are employed by RSP Systems. G. Freckmann is general manager and medical director of the Institute for Diabetes Technology (Ulm, Germany), which carries out clinical studies, e.g., with medical devices for diabetes therapy on its own initiative and on behalf of various companies. The authors declare no other competing interests.
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References
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