| Literature DB >> 25092225 |
Yue Ruan1, Hood Thabit2, Kavita Kumareswaran2, Roman Hovorka3.
Abstract
Insulin pharmacokinetics is not well understood during continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion in type 2 diabetes (T2D). We analyzed data collected in 11 subjects with T2D [6 male, 9 white European and two of Indian ethnicity; age 59.7(12.1) years, BMI 30.1(3.9) kg/m(2), fasting C-peptide 1002.2(365.8) pmol/l, fasting plasma glucose 9.6(2.2) mmol/l, diabetes duration 8.0(6.2) years and HbA1c 8.3(0.8)%; mean(SD)] who underwent a 24-h study investigating closed-loop insulin delivery at the Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Facility, Cambridge, UK. Subcutaneous delivery of insulin lispro was modulated every 15 min according to a model predictive control algorithm. Two complementary insulin assays facilitated discrimination between exogenous (lispro) and endogenous plasma insulin concentrations measured every 15-60 min. Lispro pharmacokinetics was represented by a linear two-compartment model whilst parameters were estimated using a Bayesian approach applying a closed-form model solution. The time-to-peak of lispro absorption (t(max)) was 109.6 (75.5-120.5) min [median (interquartile range)] and the metabolic clearance rate (MCR(I)) 1.26 (0.87-1.56)×10(-2) l/kg/min. MCR(I) was negatively correlated with fasting C-peptide (r(s)=-0.84; P=.001) and with fasting plasma insulin concentration (r(s)=-0.79; P=.004). In conclusion, compartmental modelling adequately represents lispro kinetics during continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion in T2D. Fasting plasma C-peptide or fasting insulin may be predictive of lispro metabolic clearance rate in T2D but further investigations are warranted.Entities:
Keywords: Artificial pancreas; Bayesian estimation; Insulin lispro; Mathematical modelling; Pharmacokinetics; Type 2 diabetes
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25092225 DOI: 10.1016/j.cmpb.2014.07.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Comput Methods Programs Biomed ISSN: 0169-2607 Impact factor: 5.428