Fortune | FORTUNE 2024年11月23日
Continuous glucose monitors are trendy wearables—but how useful are they? Here’s what experts say
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随着连续血糖监测仪(CGM)的普及,越来越多的人,包括糖尿病患者、普通人和运动员,都开始使用它来追踪自己的血糖水平。CGM通过测量组织液中的葡萄糖浓度,帮助人们了解食物对血糖的影响,从而调整饮食、提升能量、改善健康状况。然而,对于非糖尿病人群来说,CGM的使用价值和必要性尚存争议。文章探讨了CGM的工作原理、应用场景、成本以及未来发展趋势,并分析了其对不同人群的意义,帮助读者了解CGM的优势和局限性。

🤔 **CGM的工作原理:**CGM通过植入皮肤下的传感器测量组织液中的葡萄糖浓度,而非直接测量血糖。葡萄糖从血管流入细胞,组织液中的葡萄糖浓度略低于血糖浓度,传感器将数据传输至手机或监测设备,帮助用户了解血糖变化趋势。

📈 **CGM的应用:**CGM最初用于帮助糖尿病患者控制血糖,但现在也逐渐应用于健康领域,帮助人们了解食物对血糖的影响,优化饮食结构,提升能量水平,预防慢性疾病。

💰 **CGM的成本:**CGM设备和服务费用较高,每月费用约250美元,主要成本来自需要每两周更换一次的传感器。目前保险公司通常只为糖尿病患者报销CGM费用,但随着技术的普及和竞争加剧,未来价格可能会下降,保险覆盖范围也可能扩大。

🤔 **CGM的争议:**对于非糖尿病人群,CGM的必要性尚存争议。一些专家认为,对于普通人群来说,关注体重、运动等“粗略指标”可能更为有效,过度关注血糖波动反而可能带来焦虑和不必要的压力。

🏋️ **CGM的潜在应用:**CGM可能适用于希望提升运动表现的精英运动员,帮助他们了解不同食物和训练对血糖的影响,从而优化训练计划和营养策略。

Many people with diabetes (including Nick Jonas, who appeared in a Super Bowl ad for Dexcom’s CGM), more average Joes and Janes, and even elite athletes are shooting continuous glucose monitors into their arms in order to detail their levels throughout the day. If you’ve seen a plastic circle on the upper back of a person’s arm, that’s a CGM. They’re the easiest way to track glucose. Blood sugar meters or glucometers require a small sample of blood to test—usually through a finger prick.The hope is that CGMs will help people figure out the best foods to eat and the right order to eat them to encourage weight loss, increase energy, and make other health gains. Understanding glucose levelsBlood glucose, which your body creates from food during the digestive process, provides energy. Insulin shuttles it through the blood system into cells, giving you the get-up-and-go to play tennis, hit the gym and, or get work done. Your body uses some immediately and leaves the rest in cells for use later. Dr. Liz Applegate, distinguished senior lecturer and director of sports nutrition emerita at the University of California Davis, likens the body’s delivery system of blood glucose to the hallways of a multi-classroom kindergarten building. “Think of your body as a busy school. All your blood vessels are the hallways and the cells are the classrooms. Insulin is a hallway monitor and the students are blood glucose,” she says. “So when we have an influx of glucose students from what we’ve eaten, the insulin tells the glucose where to go. It knocks on the doors of the classrooms. If the cell receptor is working well, the door opens up and glucose goes in. That’s normally the situation.”When it doesn’t work, that’s “hundreds of little kids running loose unsupervised and scribbling on the walls. That’s glucose damaging the epithelial lining of blood vessels” and creating health problems.When blood glucose drops in diabetics, they become hypoglycemic and may start shaking, feel dizzy, become lethargic, or get very confused. Over time, uncontrolled diabetes can lead to heart or kidney disease and severe vision and auditory issues, as well as problems with the feet. So, yes, monitoring glucose is a must for this population—as well as for those with a family history of type 2 diabetes or other symptoms of pre-diabetes.But for people who don’t have diabetes, blood sugar fluctuations aren’t usually dangerous. They’re, mostly, just part of everyday life as people eat (or skip meals), exercise, and drink alcohol. “There are many many factors that impact it,” says Applegate. And blood glucose levels balance out as daily activity changes.How continuous glucose monitors workCGMS do not measure blood glucose levels. Instead, they measure levels of glucose in interstitial fluid, or the fluid surrounding your cells. Glucose usually flows from blood vessels into cells, so glucose levels in interstitial fluid often lag blood glucose levels a bit.Most CGMs include a housing that contains a data transmitter and a minimally invasive filament sensor that’s shot under the skin. (Earlier versions—some of which are still on the market—used a needle instead of the filament.) The filament, which is coated in a glucose-sensing enzymes like glucose oxidase, wears out over time and must be replaced every seven to 14 days, depending on the brand. The housing is held in place with an adhesive on the back of the wearer’s arm. The data transmitter sends information collected through the filament to a monitor or an app on the user’s phone and, usually, whatever service the person is using to monitor their numbers. For diabetes patients, this can include a clinic or a doctor’s office. For non-diabetes CGM users, the numbers are where things can get tricky. Blood sugar is a constantly shifting number, depending on what you eat and drink, sleep, exercise, stress, hormones, medications, time of day, and more. Diabetics know what to watch for but, for non-diabetics, the meaning behind the constantly shifting number can be confusing. CGM technologyCGMs, whether for diabetics or people who are blood sugar curious, are not a cheap technology. Insurance or Medicare generally pay for a CGM for people with diabetes. But the technology is now also being produced for wellness-driven companies, rather than those sitting on the purely medical side of the glucose line. Companies that offer CGMs to the general public—usually through direct to consumer sales—include NutriSense, Signos, and Veri. Their products are usually bundled with personalized nutrition advice based on the customer’s metrics.At NutriSense, they say it’s a holistic approach to health that keeps future health problems from developing. “We’re spending more money per capita every single year on folks trying to help them with their health, and more than any other country in the world. People keep getting sicker and sicker,” says Dan Zavorotny, co-founder and COO of NutriSense, a company that provides everyday people with CGMs and offers personalized nutrition counseling based on the results.He founded NutriSense to try and “prevent disease and give people information ahead of time versus trying to manage things when it was too late.”The program, which has been on the market for over three years, costs $250 for a month of monitoring, and provides access to a dietitian who “helps you understand what you’re seeing, looks at your goals, and then tells you hey, I think these are the most important changes that you could make to improve your health,” says Carlee Hayes, senior nutrition manager at Nutrisense. While the explanation sounds promising, there isn’t much research to back up glucose monitoring for the average person. “Historically, research is really lagging behind technology. Continuous glucose monitoring is no exception to that rule,” says Hayes.But, she adds, there are “a lot of research studies right now using this technology in individuals without diabetes, but it’s really in that preliminary phase.” NutriSense is doing its own clinical trials and Zavorotny says “we’ve seen some really good results.” He couldn’t share details until the studies are published.The cost of CGMsBecause of that $250 per month monitoring cost, CGMs are out of reach for a lot of consumers. The biggest cost comes from the hardware, which has to be replaced every two weeks because the sensors wear out, but Zavorotny says that “as it becomes more scalable and the hardware manufacturers start lowering the prices and there’s more competition in the marketplace,” the price will drop.And, says Zavorotny, “theoretically insurance companies will start covering this over time [and] reduce the cost in the future.” He also says that people don’t need to wear the devices year-round. They say some customers use a CGM for a month to get baseline measurements and a first round of advice from their dietitians. (One month would require one swap-out of the hardware so the user can get a fresh sensor.) Because these are not diabetic patients, day-to-day monitoring is not necessary. They can develop a plan based on a month of data. Then people return for another round of using the device every 12 to 18 months to adjust for where their life and eating is at that point. Customers only pay when actively using the devices and the service. Should you use a continuous glucose monitor?When it comes to using a CGM for general health, no physical harm comes from just using the devices. Though Applegate doesn’t recommend the units for the average person, she thinks there may be some good use cases for elite athletes who want to get an edge before a big event. “But do you need to always have it?” she asks. “I look at it as TMI … especially for these average Joes who are doing it because it’s a fad and then they put it off to the side.” Her recommendation? She suggests focusing on “gross measurements” like dropping 10 pounds or cutting three minutes from your 10K.

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连续血糖监测 CGM 血糖 糖尿病 健康
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