Towards an artificial pancreas at home

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_7916087E4C8B
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Towards an artificial pancreas at home
Journal
Diabetes Metab
Author(s)
Renard E., Farret A., Place J., Wojtusciszyn A., Bringer J.
ISSN
1878-1780 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1262-3636
Publication state
Published
Issued date
12/2011
Volume
37 Suppl 4
Pages
S94-8
Language
english
Notes
Renard, E
Farret, A
Place, J
Wojtusciszyn, A
Bringer, J
eng
France
Diabetes Metab. 2011 Dec;37 Suppl 4:S94-8. doi: 10.1016/S1262-3636(11)70973-9.
Abstract
AIM: To review the recent clinical research related to the development of an artificial pancreas and the current perspectives for its home use. METHODS: All clinical investigations assessing closed-loop insulin delivery systems in diabetic patients in the literature were collected and analyzed to identify any significant advances as well as bottlenecks. RESULTS: The development of an artificial pancreas for ambulatory use offering an optimal substitute for insulin secretion has shown promising evolution over the past decade. The accumulated improvements achieved on the performance of insulin pumps using subcutaneous and intraperitoneal routes, continuous glucose monitoring and algorithms driving insulin infusion according to glucose measurement have led to numerous clinical trials recently, albeit only in a hospital setting so far. The key obstacles to achieving permanent normal glucose control are related to the delay of insulin action when infused subcutaneously or, at a lesser extent, into the peritoneal cavity, and blood glucose estimation made by subcutaneous interstitial measurement. These time lags impair the reactivity of the system, and suggest a need to develop complex algorithms aiming at their compensation. So far, manual interventions are needed at times of food intake to prevent hyper- or hypoglycaemic excursions when insulin changes rapidly. CONCLUSION: The most recent models using subcutaneous insulin infusion and glucose measurements linked by predictive control algorithms offer sufficient effectiveness and safety to consider their forthcoming use at home, during the night as a first step.
Keywords
Algorithms, Blood Glucose/drug effects/*metabolism, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1/*drug therapy/epidemiology, Feasibility Studies, Female, France/epidemiology, Humans, Hypoglycemic Agents/*therapeutic use, Insulin/*therapeutic use, Male, *Pancreas, Artificial/trends, Reproducibility of Results
Pubmed
Create date
14/06/2021 9:59
Last modification date
18/09/2021 6:38
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