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Arden's Day Blog

Arden's Day is a type I diabetes care giver blog written by author Scott Benner. Scott has been a stay-at-home dad since 2000, he is the author of the award winning parenting memoir, 'Life Is Short, Laundry Is Eternal'. Arden's Day is an honest and transparent look at life with diabetes - since 2007.

type I diabetes, parent of type I child, diabetes Blog, OmniPod, DexCom, insulin pump, CGM, continuous glucose monitor, Arden, Arden's Day, Scott Benner, JDRF, diabetes, juvenile diabetes, daddy blog, blog, stay at home parent, DOC, twitter, Facebook, @ardensday, 504 plan, Life Is Short, Laundry Is Eternal, Dexcom SHARE, 生命是短暂的,洗衣是永恒的, Shēngmìng shì duǎnzàn de, xǐyī shì yǒnghéng de

Filtering by Category: DexCom Blog

A message from Ardens Mom

Scott Benner

DexCom recently received a warning letter from the FDA that got a lot of attention in the diabetes world.  The following is a message from my wife, (and Arden’s mom) Kelly.  Kelly happens to have some expertise in these matters and she wanted to share her thoughts on the letter and what it means.

 

RE: FDA Warning Letter to Dexcom 

 

Hello.  I am Arden's mom.  I have been a Drug Safety Professional for 14+ years. In addition to my BS and MS, I have a Certification in Medical Devices.  I read Dexcom's Warning Letter with my "Mommy" and my "Drug/Device Safety" hat on and I thought I'd add a little perspective here. 

 

Drug/Device Safety Professional: 

While a Warning Letter from an FDA inspection is never a good thing for any company, they happen more frequently than you'd expect. FDA is tasked with ensuring public safety by ensuring companies have adequate Quality Management Systems in place (this includes Medical Device Reporting of adverse events).  What jumped out at me while reading this Warning Letter, was that for over 2 years, Dexcom had not been forwarding reports of wire fractures to FDA.  How in the world was that missed?? 

 

The CFR (Code of Federal Regulations - the law that is followed by drug and medical device manufacturers) says that a manufacturer (like Dexcom) has 30 calendar days to forward information to the FDA if the information reasonably suggests that the device may have caused or contributed to a death or serious injury; or if the device has malfunctioned, and if the device were to malfunction in the same way....it would likely cause or contribute to a death or serious injury. So...we know what "death" is, but what is considered to be a "serious injury"?  According to FDA, serious injuries include: life threatening injuries, permanent impairment of a body function or permanent damage to a body structure, or something that requires medical or surgical intervention to prevent permanent impariment of a body function or permanent damage to a body structure. Does our example of a fractured wire qualify as a malfunction that could lead to serious injury if it happens again?  The answer is YES!   

 

Customer Report 09-5141 in the Warning Letter details a 3-year-old having surgery under general anesthesia to remove the fractured wire.  RED FLAG! - If a Health Care Professional felt that a wire left in the skin of a small child required surgical intervention to remove, that is significant and easily meets FDAs definition of a "reportable MDR"; that is, a malfunction occurred (the fractured wire was left in the skin) and surgical intervention was required to prevent serious injury.  It doesn't get any clearer than this....why wasn't Dexcom forwarding these reports to FDA as they should have been....for over 2 years??  For me, this calls into question Dexcom's Medical Device Reporting System.  I assume Dexcom is working diligently right now on training their staff since this most basic concept was not understood by Dexcom's Safety Team.  It is not uncommon for FDA inspections to spur companies into investing the time and resources needed to create a robust, efficient and compliant Safety Group. 

 

Mommy: 

Oh no!  My little girl is wearing this thing!!!  Deep breaths....... 

 

Drug/Device Safety Professional & Mommy: 

Dexcom has some work to do - let's hope they do it because my little girl (a physically tiny 5-year-old) needs their product.  Working in the drug/device world is tough. I sympathize with Dexcom, like managing a child with Type 1, Device Safety can be more of an art than a science. All things considered, the incidence of this happening is relatively low (3 per 10,000 distributed devices) - no device is perfect.  When I think of the options -- use the device with a small possibility of a fractured wire vs not using the device and risking terrible lows and seizures.....I'll use the device and be really careful inserting and removing it!  As parents, we need to weight the benefits and the risks.  The risk of a serious injury is relatively low.....I drive on 287 in NJ everyday...and THAT is risky, but I do it. I am not overly concerned about the Warning Letter. Dexcom has a good product and it's in their best interest to put Corrective Actions and Preventive Actions in place to correct their errors on Medical Device Reporting.  At least it's on everyone's radar now!  And as they say, knowledge is power....and we need that power because to our kids we are SuperHeros!


You can follow Kelly on Twitter @KellyABenner

CGM Class at CHOP

Scott Benner

 

This Thursday Arden and I will be attending a CGM start class at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP).  

 

The CHOP CGM staff will make sure that Arden and I understand the device and then they’ll assist us in placing Arden’s first sensor on her abdomen.  A few weeks later I have a follow up appointment to learn how to read and respond to the data that the Seven Plus provides.

 

I feel extremely fortunate to have quality health insurance and access to a children’s hospital that is so up to date with type I and the technologies that make living with it more tolerable.  I know too many people who are under or uninsured and my heart goes out to them.  I’ve also heard so many crazy stories of endocrinologists that don’t appear to understand type I in any meaningful way... I couldn’t express profoundly enough how much we appreciate CHOP, it’s employees and their dedication to keeping Arden healthy.

 

With the addition of the DexCom seven plus to Arden’s care plan, I’m expecting to gain even better control of her BGs.  We were already so thrilled with the control that our OmniPodinsulin pump gave us... I’m frankly giddy at the prospect of things getting better.  We have come a long way from taking 10 shots a day.  I’ve been told that there will be an option to integrate the seven plus into OmniPod some time early next year!  On that day... I’ll actually be more excited then when the new iPhone comes out (and I’m traditionally very happy on iPhone day).

 

**

The following are archived comments from this post. You can post new comments below.

This is so AWESOME! I am so happy for you and Arden! Good Luck!
Tuesday, May 25, 2010 - 11:19 AM
Barbara (Julia's grandmother)
Understand your excitement -- we, too, are in the process of getting the CGM for Julia.  Of course, a cure would be our #1 Dream Come True.  However,
in the meanwhile, any new products that help us get better control of their blood sugar numbers are welcome.  Enjoy the class and looking forward to hearing about Arden's progress with the CMG.
Wednesday, May 26, 2010 - 09:57 AM

 

 

Not that Dino

Scott Benner

Not that Dino...  Dino, Arden’s DexCom rep.  Dino is working his (aw hell let’s follow through with this) purple tail off trying to get Arden’s CGM through the health insurance process and things are looking real good!  

 

I just submitted Arden’s pump records to Dino, they along with Arden’s endo’s prescription should be all we need to seal the deal and start Arden on her continuous glucose monitor - which by all accounts should significantly aid us in keeping her BGs where they should be and stave off frightening lows and life-altering highs.  I’ll talk much more about all of that as this process moves forward.

 

For now, let’s hear it for Dino!

What is a CGM

Scott Benner

Yesterday I visited Arden’s endo and we reviewed the data that was collected last week from her CGM study.

 

A CGM (Continuous Glucose Monitor) is

From dexcom.com: “A CGM system is a device that you wear to measure glucose levels in real-time, day and night — even during sleep it's watching out for you. This is like seeing up to 288 fingersticks daily, but unlike fingersticks, you see so much more than just a number. You see continuous glucose information, the direction your glucose is headed, and the speed it's moving.”

 

Arden completed a 6 day blind study last week which provided us with second to second information about her BG levels. Much was learned!  The first thing that we learned was that her BG sometimes gets very low overnight, which is troubling. Even though she may wake up at a safe or even elevated level there are protracted times overnight that she is low.  We also were able to see exactly how different foods, activity and moods effected Arden's BGs.  This data was enough for us to realize that Arden should be wearing a CGM full-time.  

 

So yesterday I put the necessary paperwork in place to start the process, if all goes well on the insurance side (and I think that it will) Arden should be wearing her own DexCom Seven Plus in a week or so.

 

I started this new section on Ardens Day so that I can track the learning and implementation of Arden’s newest piece of life improving and saving technology.  I’m green at this CGM thing so we will all be learning together.  

 

To stay up-to-date you can check back, subscribe on the main page or sign up for email updates by emailing me at the links on the site.

 

Here we go...