BackgroundContinuous glucose monitoring (CGM) originally was developed for diabetic patients and it may be a useful tool for monitoring glucose changes in pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). Its use is, however, limited by the lack of sufficient data on its reliability at insufficient peripheral perfusion. We aimed to correlate the accuracy of CGM with laboratory markers relevant to disturbed tissue perfusion.Patients and MethodsIn 38 pediatric patients (age range, 0–18 years) requiring intensive care we tested the effect of pH, lactate, hematocrit and serum potassium on the difference between CGM and meter glucose measurements. Guardian® (Medtronic®) CGM results were compared to GEM 3000 (Instrumentation laboratory®) and point-of-care measurements. The clinical accuracy of CGM was evaluated by Clarke Error Grid -, Bland-Altman analysis and Pearson’s correlation. We used Friedman test for statistical analysis (statistical significance was established as a p < 0.05).ResultsCGM values exhibited a considerable variability without any correlation with the examined laboratory parameters. Clarke, Bland-Altman analysis and Pearson’s correlation coefficient demonstrated a good clinical accuracy of CGM (zone A and B = 96%; the mean difference between reference and CGM glucose was 1,3 mg/dL, 48 from the 780 calibration pairs overrunning the 2 standard deviation; Pearson’s correlation coefficient: 0.83).ConclusionsThe accuracy of CGM measurements is independent of laboratory parameters relevant to tissue hypoperfusion. CGM may prove a reliable tool for continuous monitoring of glucose changes in PICUs, not much influenced by tissue perfusion, but still not appropriate for being the base for clinical decisions.