With the improved algorithm, all experiments confirmed a reduction in BG- and GIR-oscillations without a major impact on other glucose clamp parameters. The optimized algorithm has been implemented in ClampArt for all future glucose clamp studies.
Background: In automated glucose clamp experiments, blood glucose (BG) concentrations are kept close to a predefined target level using variable glucose infusion rates (GIRs) determined by implemented algorithms. Clamp quality (ie, the ability to keep BG close to target) highly depends on the quality of these algorithms. We developed a new Clamp algorithm based on the proportional-integral-derivative (PID) approach and compared clamp quality between this and the established Biostator (BS) algorithm. Methods: In numerical simulations, the PID-based algorithm was optimized in silico. The optimized Clamp-PID algorithm was tested in in vitro experiments and finally validated in vivo in a small ( n = 5) clinical study. Results: In silico, in vitro, and in vivo experiments showed better clamp quality for the new Clamp-PID algorithm compared with the BS algorithm: precision and absolute control deviation (ACD) decreased from 3.7% to 1.1% and from 2.9 mg/dL to 0.6 mg/dL, respectively, in the numerical simulation. The in vitro validation demonstrated reductions in precision (from 3.3% ± 0.1% (mean ± SD) to 1.4% ± 0.4%) and in ACD (from 2.3 mg/dL ± 0.4 mg/dL to 0.8 mg/dL ± 0.2 mg/dL), respectively. In the clinical study, precision and ACD improved from 6.5% ± 1.3% to 4.0% ± 1.1% and from 3.6 mg/dL ± 0.9 mg/dL to 2.2 mg/dl ± 0.6 mg/dl, respectively. The quality parameter utility did not change. Conclusions: The new Clamp-PID algorithm improves the clamp quality parameters precision and ACD versus the BS algorithm.
Background: One major advantage of automated over manual clamps are continuous measurements of blood glucose concentrations (BG) allowing frequent adaptations in glucose infusion rates (GIR). However, BG measurements might be affected by changes in blood dilution. ClampArt®, a modern automated clamp device, corrects BG measurements for blood dilution, but the impact of this correction is unclear. Methods: The authors performed a retrospective analysis of BG during glucose clamps comparing values with a fixed dilution factor with those corrected for the actual blood dilution. Results: Clamp quality substantially improved with the consideration of blood dilution: Mean accuracy fell from 8.1% ± 2.9% to 4.1% ± 0.8%, precision improved from 9.6 ± 3.6 mg/dl to 3.7 ± 1.3 mg/dl and control deviation from −2.6 ± 4.2 mg/dl to 0.2 ± 0.2 mg/dl. Conclusions: Correcting continuous BG measurements for blood dilution significantly increases BG measurement and clamp quality.
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