Diabetes Technology: CGMs, Pumps, and Apps
Diabetes management has been transformed by a generation of hardware and software tools that automate, track, and analyze glucose data in ways that manual fingerstick testing cannot replicate. This page covers the three principal technology categories — continuous glucose monitors (CGMs), insulin pumps (including closed-loop automated systems), and digital health applications — along with their regulatory classification, clinical use boundaries, and decision points for appropriate use. Understanding these tools is essential context for anyone navigating endocrinology resources and condition guides across the discipline.
Definition and Scope
Continuous glucose monitors (CGMs) are wearable biosensors that measure interstitial glucose at intervals as short as 1 to 5 minutes and transmit readings to a receiver, smartphone, or insulin pump. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) classifies CGMs as Class II or Class III medical devices depending on their intended use; devices labeled "integrated CGM" (iCGM) must meet accuracy standards defined under 21 CFR Part 882 and FDA guidance documents issued through the Center for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH).
Insulin pumps are programmable infusion devices that deliver rapid-acting insulin subcutaneously via a catheter. A closed-loop system — commonly called an artificial pancreas — pairs a pump with a CGM and a control algorithm that automatically adjusts insulin delivery without manual input. The FDA granted the first approval for a hybrid closed-loop system (Medtronic MiniMed 670G) in 2016, and the device category has expanded substantially since that milestone.
Diabetes apps span a regulatory spectrum. Apps that function as medical devices — those that analyze CGM data to guide insulin dosing, for example — are subject to FDA oversight under the Digital Health Center of Excellence framework. Apps that provide general wellness tracking or food logging typically fall outside that regulatory scope, per FDA guidance on mobile medical applications.
The full regulatory context for endocrinology describes how these device classes intersect with prescribing authority and coverage determinations.
How It Works
CGM sensors use an enzymatic electrochemical reaction (typically glucose oxidase) to oxidize interstitial glucose; the resulting electrical current is converted to a glucose concentration value. Sensor accuracy is reported as Mean Absolute Relative Difference (MARD); professional-grade CGMs approved for non-adjunctive use — meaning dosing decisions can be made without a confirmatory fingerstick — must demonstrate MARD values below 10%, per FDA iCGM special controls guidance.
Insulin pump delivery follows two programmable structures:
- Basal rate — a continuous background infusion measured in units per hour, adjustable across 24-hour time blocks.
- Bolus delivery — a discrete dose calculated by the pump's onboard algorithm using a carbohydrate-to-insulin ratio and a correction factor tied to a target glucose value.
In a hybrid closed-loop configuration, the algorithm reads CGM values every 5 minutes, compares them to a target range (typically 100–120 mg/dL in most commercially approved systems), and modulates the basal rate up or down automatically. The user still enters carbohydrate counts before meals; fully automated meal announcement remains under investigation in clinical trials as of the system generations approved through 2023.
CGM-integrated apps transmit data via Bluetooth to a smartphone display and to cloud platforms where trend data, time-in-range statistics, and ambulatory glucose profiles (AGP) — a standardized reporting format endorsed by the International Diabetes Center — are generated for both patient and clinician review.
Common Scenarios
The three dominant clinical contexts in which diabetes technology is deployed:
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Type 1 diabetes with multiple daily injections (MDI) — CGM use reduces hypoglycemia risk and improves time-in-range without requiring pump adoption. A 2017 randomized trial published in The Lancet (the DIAMOND trial) demonstrated A1C reduction of 1.0 percentage point among adults with Type 1 diabetes using CGM versus fingerstick monitoring alone.
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Type 1 diabetes with hybrid closed-loop pumping — The combined system reduces hypoglycemia burden overnight and during exercise; clinical targets per the American Diabetes Association (ADA) Standards of Care (published annually as a supplement to Diabetes Care) include time-in-range above 70% and time below 70 mg/dL below 4%.
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Type 2 diabetes on insulin therapy — CGM adoption in insulin-treated Type 2 diabetes has grown following CMS coverage expansion; Medicare began covering therapeutic CGMs for beneficiaries requiring insulin in 2017, with coverage language formalized through HCPCS codes B9004 and B9005.
Individuals managing difficult-to-control diabetes are the most frequent candidates for technology escalation.
Decision Boundaries
Not every person with diabetes is an immediate candidate for the full technology stack. Clinical and systems-level boundaries include:
- Glycemic instability threshold — ADA guidance identifies CGM as appropriate for any adult with diabetes on intensive insulin regimens; pump candidacy evaluation typically requires demonstrated ability to manage MDI and carbohydrate counting.
- Device vs. non-device app classification — Clinicians and patients should verify whether a given app carries an FDA De Novo or 510(k) clearance before relying on it for dosing guidance. The FDA's publicly searchable 510(k) database provides clearance status by product code.
- Interoperability requirements — Automated insulin delivery (AID) systems require iCGM-designated sensors; not all CGMs are interoperable with all pump algorithms. The FDA's interoperable CGM (iCGM) designation framework defines the compatibility standards.
- Pediatric considerations — Approved age thresholds differ by device; several closed-loop systems carry approvals beginning at age 2 or 6 depending on the specific system. Pediatric endocrinology evaluation is standard before initiating closed-loop therapy in children.
- Insurance and access constraints — Coverage determinations vary by payer and are not uniform across states; the insulin pump closed-loop page addresses coverage structures in more detail.
Clinicians working toward formal credentials in this domain may reference resources on diabetes technology certification through organizations such as the Association of Diabetes Care & Education Specialists (ADCES).
References
- U.S. FDA — Center for Devices and Radiological Health: iCGM Special Controls Guidance
- U.S. FDA — Digital Health Center of Excellence: Artificial Pancreas Device System
- 21 CFR Part 882 — Neurological Devices (includes glucose monitors)
- American Diabetes Association — Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes (Diabetes Care, annual supplement)
- CMS — Coverage of Therapeutic Continuous Glucose Monitors
- International Diabetes Center — Ambulatory Glucose Profile (AGP) Standardization
- FDA — 510(k) Premarket Notification Database
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