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510(k) Data Aggregation

    K Number
    K063409
    Manufacturer
    Date Cleared
    2007-01-12

    (60 days)

    Product Code
    Regulation Number
    862.1345
    Reference & Predicate Devices
    Why did this record match?
    Device Name :

    LIBERTY BLOOD GLUCOSE MONITORING SYSTEM, MODEL 8000-0067

    AI/MLSaMDIVD (In Vitro Diagnostic)TherapeuticDiagnosticis PCCP AuthorizedThirdpartyExpeditedreview
    Intended Use

    The Liberty™ Blood Glucose Monitoring System is intended to quantitatively measure blood glucose levels, also known as blood sugar, from fresh capillary whole blood samples taken from the fingertips, palm, or forearm. The Liberty, TM Test Strips are for in vitro diagnostic (outside of the body) use only. The Liberty™ System is not intended for use with neonates.

    AgaMatrix Liberty " Blood Glucose Monitoring System is intended for the quantitative measurement of glucose in fresh capillary whole blood from the fingertip, palm, or forearm. Testing is done outside the body (in vitro diagnostic use). It is indicated for use at home (over the counter (OTC) ) by persons with diabetes, or in a clinical setting by healthcare professionals, as an aid to monitor the effectiveness of diabetes control. It is not intended for use with neonates.

    AgaMatrix Liberty™ Blood Glucose Meter is intended for use with AgaMatrix Liberty™ Blood Glucose Test Strips for the quantitative measurement of glucose in frearians courty whole blood. Testing sdone outside the body (in viro diagnostic use). It is indicated for use at home (over the counter (OTC) ) by persons with diabetes, or in a clinical setting by healthcare professionals, as an aid to monitor the effectiveress of diabetes control.

    AgaMatrix Liberty " Blood Glucose Test Strips are intended for use with AgaMatrix Liberty™ Blood Glucose Meter for the quantitative measurement of glucose in fresh capillary whole blood. Testing is done outside the body (in vitro diagnostic use). It is indicated for use at home (over the counter (OTC) ) by persons with diabetes, or in a clinical setting by healthcare professionals, as an aid to monitor the effective of por diabetes control.

    AgaMatix Liberty™ Control Solutions are intended for use with the AgaMarix Libery™ Meter and AgaMatix Liberty™ Test Stri results.

    Device Description

    The AgaMatrix Liberty™ Blood Glucose Monitoring System includes a meter with batteries, compact carrying casc, quick start guide, reference guide, owner's booklet, and warranty/registration card. Test Strips, Lancing device, Lancets, and Control Solution are purchased separately.

    It is intended for over-the-counter home use by diabetics to monitor their blood glucose levels, or for use in a clinical setting by healthcare professionals. The system tests fresh capillary whole blood. The meter is a portable, battery-operated instrument.

    AI/ML Overview

    The provided 510(k) summary for the AgaMatrix Liberty™ Blood Glucose Monitoring System (K063409) does not contain detailed information regarding the specific acceptance criteria and the comprehensive study results as typically expected for device validation.

    Instead, it states that the device complies with certain ISO and IEC standards, which imply conformance to established performance requirements. However, the specific numerical acceptance criteria (e.g., accuracy percentages, precision limits) and the detailed results of studies demonstrating compliance are not explicitly provided in the given text.

    Based on the provided document, here's what can be extracted and what information is missing:

    1. A table of acceptance criteria and the reported device performance:

    This information is not explicitly stated in the provided text. The document refers to compliance with ISO 15197:2003, which sets performance requirements for blood glucose monitoring systems for self-testing. However, the specific numerical criteria (e.g., accuracy within a certain percentage of a reference method) and the device's measured performance against those criteria are not listed.

    2. Sample size used for the test set and the data provenance:

    This information is not explicitly stated in the provided text. The document mentions "Testing" but does not detail the sample sizes for patient samples or control samples, nor their country of origin or whether the data was retrospective or prospective.

    3. Number of experts used to establish the ground truth for the test set and the qualifications of those experts:

    This information is not explicitly stated in the provided text. For blood glucose monitoring systems, "ground truth" is typically established by laboratory reference methods, not by expert consensus on visual assessment.

    4. Adjudication method for the test set:

    This information is not applicable/not explicitly stated in the context of a blood glucose monitoring system's performance testing. Adjudication methods like 2+1 or 3+1 are typically used for subjective assessments (e.g., image interpretation) where multiple readers provide their opinion. For quantitative measurements like blood glucose, accuracy is determined by comparison to a reference method.

    5. If a multi-reader multi-case (MRMC) comparative effectiveness study was done, If so, what was the effect size of how much human readers improve with AI vs without AI assistance:

    This information is not applicable. This device is a blood glucose monitoring system, not an AI-assisted diagnostic imaging device that involves human readers interpreting cases.

    6. If a standalone (i.e., algorithm only without human-in-the-loop performance) was done:

    This information is not explicitly stated but is implicitly the primary mode of operation for a blood glucose meter. The "device performance" would inherently be its standalone performance, as it provides a direct measurement rather than an interpretation to a human.

    7. The type of ground truth used:

    This is not explicitly stated, but for blood glucose monitoring systems, the ground truth is universally established by laboratory reference methods (e.g., YSI analyzer). The document mentions "in vitro diagnostic (outside of the body) use only," which confirms the nature of the testing.

    8. The sample size for the training set:

    This information is not applicable/not explicitly stated. "Training set" refers to data used to develop and train machine learning models. A blood glucose monitoring system, based on electrochemical principles, does not typically involve a "training set" in the machine learning sense. Its performance is based on its sensor technology and calibration, not learned patterns from a dataset.

    9. How the ground truth for the training set was established:

    This information is not applicable for the reasons stated in point 8.


    Summary of available and missing information:

    CategoryInformation from Document
    1. Acceptance Criteria & Reported PerformanceNot explicitly stated in numerical form. The document states compliance with ISO 15197:2003, which outlines general requirements for blood glucose monitoring systems, but the specific performance results against these criteria are not provided.
    2. Test Set Sample Size & Data ProvenanceNot explicitly stated. "Testing" is mentioned, but details on sample size, country of origin, or retrospective/prospective nature are absent.
    3. Experts for Ground Truth & QualificationsNot applicable. Ground truth for blood glucose meters is typically a lab reference method, not expert consensus.
    4. Adjudication MethodNot applicable. Adjudication methods (e.g., 2+1) are for subjective assessments, not for quantitative measurements like blood glucose.
    5. MRMC Comparative Effectiveness Study (AI assistance)Not applicable. This is a blood glucose monitoring system, not an AI-assisted diagnostic imaging device.
    6. Standalone PerformanceImplicitly done. The device's performance as a blood glucose meter would inherently be its standalone performance.
    7. Type of Ground Truth UsedImplicitly, laboratory reference methods. While not directly stated, "in vitro diagnostic" and the nature of blood glucose testing imply comparison to highly accurate laboratory analyzers.
    8. Training Set Sample SizeNot applicable. This device uses electrochemical technology, not machine learning that requires a "training set."
    9. Ground Truth for Training SetNot applicable. (See point 8)

    To get the specific acceptance criteria and detailed study results, one would typically need to refer to a more detailed clinical study report or the full submission documentation to the FDA, which is not provided in this 510(k) summary. The summary focuses on establishing substantial equivalence based on identical technological characteristics and compliance with general standards.

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    K Number
    K052762
    Manufacturer
    Date Cleared
    2006-01-23

    (115 days)

    Product Code
    Regulation Number
    862.1345
    Reference & Predicate Devices
    Why did this record match?
    Device Name :

    LIBERTY BLOOD GLUCOSE MONITORING SYSTEM, MODEL 8000-0067

    AI/MLSaMDIVD (In Vitro Diagnostic)TherapeuticDiagnosticis PCCP AuthorizedThirdpartyExpeditedreview
    Intended Use

    AgaMatrix LibertyTM Blood Glucose Monitoring System is intended for the quantitative measurement of glucose in fresh capillary whole blood from the fingertip and palm of the hand. Testing is done outside the body (in vitro diagnostic use). It is indicated for use at home (over the counter (OTC) ) by persons with diabetes, or in a clinical setting by healthcare professionals, as an aid to monitor the effectiveness of diabetes control.

    AgaMatrix Liberty™ Blood Glucose Meter is intended for use with AgaMatrix Liberty™ Blood Glucose Test Strips for the quantitative measurement of glucose in fresh capillary whole blood from the fingertip and palm of the hand. Testing is done outside the body (in vitro diagnostic use). It is indicated for use at home (over the counter (OTC) ) by persons with diabetes, or in a clinical setting by healthcare professionals, as an aid to monitor the effectiveness of diabetes control.

    AgaMatrix Liberty™ Blood Glucose Test Strips are intended for use with AgaMatrix Liberty™ Blood Glucose Meter for the quantitative measurement of glucose in fresh capillary whole blood from the fingertip and palm of the hand. Testing is done outside the body (in vitro diagnostic use). It is indicated for use at home (over the counter (OTC) ) by persons with diabetes, or in a clinical setting by healthcare professionals, as an aid to monitor the effectiveness of diabetes control.

    AgaMatrix Liberty™ Control Solutions are intended for use with the AgaMatrix Liberty™ Meter and AgaMatrix Liberty™ Test Strips as a quality control check to verify the accura results.

    Device Description

    The AgaMatrix Liberty™ Blood Glucose Monitoring System includes a meter with batteries, compact carrying case, quick start guide, reference guide, owner's booklet, and warranty/ registration card. Test Strips, Lancing device, Lancets, and Control Solution are purchased separately.

    It is intended for over-the-counter home use by diabetics to monitor their blood glucose levels, or for use in a clinical setting by healthcare professionals. The system tests fresh capillary whole blood. The meter is a portable, battery-operated instrument.

    AI/ML Overview

    The provided text describes the AgaMatrix Liberty™ Blood Glucose Monitoring System and its 510(k) submission, confirming its substantial equivalence to a predicate device. However, it does not contain the detailed acceptance criteria or the specific study data that definitively proves the device meets those criteria.

    The document mentions compliance with ISO 15197:2003, which sets requirements for blood glucose monitoring systems for self-testing. This ISO standard would contain the acceptance criteria for accuracy, but the document itself does not explicitly list these criteria or the specific performance metrics achieved by the AgaMatrix Liberty™ system against them.

    Therefore, the requested information in the prompt cannot be fully extracted from the provided text.

    Here's what can be inferred and what is missing:


    1. Table of Acceptance Criteria and Reported Device Performance

    • Acceptance Criteria: Not explicitly stated in the document. The document refers to compliance with ISO 15197:2003, which would define these criteria, but the specific numerical targets for accuracy (e.g., within X% or Y mg/dL of a reference method) are not provided.
    • Reported Device Performance: Not explicitly stated in the document in numerical terms that can be directly compared to acceptance criteria. The document states "The new device contains additional features compared to the predicate device. These additional features include faster test time, smaller sample size, and better accuracy." and "The system performs as intended and raises no new safety of effectiveness issues." While "better accuracy" is mentioned, no quantitative data is given.

    Missing Information (based on the provided text):

    2. Sample size used for the test set and the data provenance: Not mentioned.

    3. Number of experts used to establish the ground truth for the test set and the qualifications of those experts: Not mentioned, as no specific clinical study details are provided.

    4. Adjudication method (e.g., 2+1, 3+1, none) for the test set: Not mentioned.

    5. If a multi-reader multi-case (MRMC) comparative effectiveness study was done, If so, what was the effect size of how much human readers improve with AI vs without AI assistance: Not applicable. This device is a blood glucose monitor, not an AI-assisted diagnostic imaging device.

    6. If a standalone (i.e., algorithm only without human-in-the-loop performance) was done: Not applicable in the context of typical AI performance studies. This is a point-of-care diagnostic device. Its performance is inherent to the device itself.

    7. The type of ground truth used (expert consensus, pathology, outcomes data, etc.): Not explicitly stated, but for a blood glucose monitor, the ground truth would typically be established by a laboratory reference method (e.g., a YSI analyzer).

    8. The sample size for the training set: Not mentioned.

    9. How the ground truth for the training set was established: Not mentioned.


    Summary of what can be extracted:

    The device is the AgaMatrix Liberty™ Blood Glucose Monitoring System. It gained 510(k) clearance by demonstrating substantial equivalence to the Ascensia Contour Blood Glucose Monitoring System (K023657). The manufacturer certifies compliance with ISO 15197:2003, which is the relevant standard for blood glucose monitoring systems' accuracy. However, the specific data from the studies (sample sizes, detailed accuracy metrics, ground truth methods, etc.) are not included in this 510(k) summary document.

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