| Literature DB >> 22071283 |
Daniela Elleri1, David B Dunger, Roman Hovorka.
Abstract
Type 1 diabetes is one of the most common endocrine problems in childhood and adolescence, and remains a serious chronic disorder with increased morbidity and mortality, and reduced quality of life. Technological innovations positively affect the management of type 1 diabetes. Closed-loop insulin delivery (artificial pancreas) is a recent medical innovation, aiming to reduce the risk of hypoglycemia while achieving tight control of glucose. Characterized by real-time glucose-responsive insulin administration, closed-loop systems combine glucose-sensing and insulin-delivery components. In the most viable and researched configuration, a disposable sensor measures interstitial glucose levels, which are fed into a control algorithm controlling delivery of a rapid-acting insulin analog into the subcutaneous tissue by an insulin pump. Research progress builds on an increasing use of insulin pumps and availability of glucose monitors. We review the current status of insulin delivery, focusing on clinical evaluations of closed-loop systems. Future goals are outlined, and benefits and limitations of closed-loop therapy contrasted. The clinical utility of these systems is constrained by inaccuracies in glucose sensing, inter- and intra-patient variability, and delays due to absorption of insulin from the subcutaneous tissue, all of which are being gradually addressed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22071283 PMCID: PMC3229449 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-9-120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Figure 1An illustrative representation of a closed-loop insulin delivery system. (A) A sensor (black rectangle) transmits information about interstitial glucose levels to a handheld device about the size of a cellphone (red box) which holds a control algorithm and interacts with the user. An insulin pump (blue box in the pocket) delivers a rapid-acting insulin analog subcutaneously. Insulin delivery is modulated by the control algorithm. The communication between the system components is wireless. The control algorithm can also reside within the insulin pump. (Adapted from Hovorka [12]). (B) The closed loop replicates the physiological feedback normally provided by the β-cell.
Closed-loop approaches according to treatment objective
| Objective | Insulin-delivery modulation |
|---|---|
| Reduce severity and/or duration of hypoglycemia | Suspension of insulin delivery at hypoglycemia (low glucose suspend) |
| Hypoglycemia prevention | Pre-emptive suspension/reduction of insulin delivery before hypoglycemia occurs |
| Control to range | Modulation (increase or decrease) of insulin delivery outside target range to limit hypoglycemia and hyperglycemic excursions |
| Overnight glucose control | Modulation of insulin delivery for nocturnal glucose control; lifestyle disturbances have limited effect |
| Closed-loop system with meal/exercise announcement | Modulation of insulin delivery after meals using boluses administered by patient with announcement of these, and exercise to the algorithm |
| Fully closed-loop system | Modulation of insulin delivery when the control algorithm is unaware of meals, exercise, stress and other lifestyle disturbances that affect glucose control; glucagon may be coadministered to reduce risk of hypoglycemia |
Summary of achieved results
| Objective/approach | Status | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low glucose suspend | Postmarketing studies | Reduced nocturnal hypoglycemia in those with greatest risk; well- accepted by patients | [ |
| Suspend to prevent low glucose | Laboratory studies; home studies planned | Prevention of 80% of events of nocturnal hypoglycemia; effective as part of overnight closed-loop system | [ |
| Treat to range | Laboratory testing underway | - | - |
| Overnight | Laboratory studies; home studies planned | Increased time spent in target glucose range by 20% in adolescents and adults; reduced risk of nocturnal hypoglycemia | [ |
| Meal announcement | Laboratory studies | Feasibility documented in children, adults, and pregnant women using various control algorithms; preferred option by most investigators | [ |
| Fully closed-loop | Laboratory studies | Feasibility documented in children and adults; addition of small prandial bolus improves control; delayed insulin absorption/action remains a challenge | [ |
| Fully closed-loop with glucagon coadministration | Laboratory studies | Feasibility documented in adults; glucagon helpful but cannot always overcome insulin overdelivery | [ |
Figure 2Distribution of plasma glucose levels after midnight in young people and adults during (top panel) closed-loop and (bottom panel) conventional insulin-pump therapy (continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII)). Vertical dashed lines indicate the threshold of significant hypoglycemia (3.0 mmol/l) and the target glucose range of 3.91 to 8.0 mmol/l. Values at the top denote the percentage of plasma glucose values within the respective glucose ranges (reproduced with permission from Kumareswaran et al. [60]).
Goals to improve gradually closed-loop performance
| Factor | Desirable improvements |
|---|---|
| Insulin delivery | Faster absorption |
| Glucose sensing | Increased accuracy and reliability; reduced false-positive hypoglycemia alarms |
| Insulin modulation | Adaptive algorithms |
| Dual-hormone systems | Dual-chamber pumps |
| Communication between glucose sensor and insulin pump | More reliable connectivity; standardized communication protocol |
| Human factors | Reduced size of devices; enhanced ease of use; sensing and delivery from a single body port |