Customers have known for months that the Dexcom G7 continuous glucose monitoring sensor had problems. Now, the company is ...
If you have either of these, throw them out ASAP.
Editor’s note: This post was updated on June 9 to include a statment from Pharmsource. People with diabetes who use the Dexcom G7 continuous glucose monitoring system need to check the lot numbers on ...
Dexcom has discovered that certain lots of its Dexcom G7 sensors that were supposed to be scrapped and destroyed were actually stolen during the destruction process and sold by third parties. Stolen ...
Dexcom says stolen G7 sensors from two scrapped lots were sold through unauthorized channels, creating infection and reading-failure risks.
Dexcom (Nasdaq:DXCM) announced today that third parties stole and sold certain G7 continuous glucose monitor (CGM) lots designated as scrap.
The company routinely scraps sensors that do not meet its standards. The sensors are sent to a third-party vendor for destruction and recycling. Dexcom said it traced sales of the ...
Hunterbrook Media released a short report on diabetes-focused DexCom Inc. (NASDAQ:DXCM), citing that the company sold the "adulterated" device. Benzinga reached out to DexCom for comments and is yet ...
(Nasdaq: DXCM), the global leader in glucose biosensing, announced today through ongoing quality and accounting reviews it recently identified certain lots of Dexcom G7 sensors originally designated ...