
19 – iCGM vs eCGM vs Standardisation by the IFCC: CGM Regulation with Dr. Guido Freckmann
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19 – iCGM vs eCGM vs Standardisation by the IFCC: CGM Regulation with Dr. Guido Freckmann
Full show notes and FAQ, and consider buying me a Coffee to keep pumping
Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) has transformed diabetes care — but how do we know which systems are accurate, safe, and truly comparable?
In this episode, John Pemberton is joined by Dr. Guido Freckmann (Institute of Diabetes Technology, Ulm; former chair of the IFCC CGM Working Group). Together they unpack:
- Why CE marking in Europe is not a quality standard
- How the FDA’s iCGM framework (2018) was groundbreaking, but has limitations in study design
- Why the proposed eCGM model for Europe risks monopolising the market without fixing accuracy problems
- The IFCC’s roadmap towards a full ISO standard for CGM – robust, reproducible, and aligned with clinical reality
Full Show notes and FAQ, and consider buying me a Coffee to keep pumping
Key Themes & Watch-Outs
🔹 CE Mark ≠ Quality Standard
- CE marking is a regulatory pathway, not a guarantee of performance.
- Manufacturers can submit selective data, and the results are not public.
🔹 ICGM (2018): A Step Forward, But Outdated
- FDA iCGM rules set minimum standards, but study design criteria were vague.
- Devices can appear accurate by avoiding stressful glucose swings.
🔹 Why Standardisation Matters
- Standardisation would define not just performance metrics but also how studies are run.
- It would align CGM systems to the same comparator (capillary or venous) and reduce therapy discrepancies.
🔹 Capillary vs Venous Debate
- Capillary glucose reflects what people actually test and what their bodies are exposed to.
- Venous alignment risks giving a “false reassurance” of being in range.
- An agreement is needed: whichever is chosen must be standardised, with bias correction.
🔹 Clinical Impact
- Different CGMs can give the same time-in-range but very different HbA1c and complication risk.
- That undermines trust, confuses therapy adjustments, and makes clinical trial endpoints unreliable.
🔹 Looking Ahead
- CGM standardisation is in motion, but likely won’t be implemented before 2030.
- Until then, clinicians and people with diabetes need to scrutinise study design and remain critical of performance claims.
Quotes from the Episode
“CE marking is not a quality standard. You have to dig into study design — and that’s not practical for the average person with diabetes or most clinicians.” – John Pemberton
“CGM systems often perform worse at high rates of change than at stable glucose levels. That’s why stress-testing is vital.” – Dr. Guido Freckmann
“Different CGM systems can give the same time-in-range but very different HbA1c and complication risks. That’s unacceptable.” – John Pemberton
“Manufacturers can design studies to get good results by avoiding rapid glucose swings. Without rules, accuracy is only on paper.” – Dr. Guido Freckmann
Full Show notes and FAQ, and consider buying me a Coffee to keep pumping
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Collaboration: John Pemberton — john@theglucoseneverlies.com
Creatives: Anjanee Kohli — anj@theglucoseneverlies.com
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Information
- Show
- FrequencyUpdated weekly
- Published30 September 2025 at 03:00 UTC
- Length29 min
- Episode19
- RatingClean