Artificial pancreas: Scientists are pairing continuous glucose monitors, such as the device pictured here (white device, top), with insulin pumps, such as the one pictured here (pagerlike device, bottom), to create an artificial pancreas for people with diabetes. In this commercial system by Medtronic, the glucose monitor wirelessly transmits data to the pump via a meter (not pictured). However, the user must still decide how much insulin he needs and dose it out himself. In an artificial pancreas, specially-designed algorithms would calculate how much insulin is required, and how quickly, and then signal the drug’s delivery without human intervention.
Medtronic, Inc.

Biomedicine

An Artificial Pancreas

A device that reads glucose levels and delivers insulin may be close at hand.

  • Friday, August 8, 2008
  • By Lauren Gravitz

Today, people with diabetes have a range of technologies to help keep their blood sugar in check, including continuous monitors that can keep tabs on glucose levels throughout the day and insulin pumps that can deliver the drug. But the diabetic is still responsible for making executive decisions--when to test his blood or give himself a shot--and the system has plenty of room for human error. Now, however, researchers say that the first generations of an artificial pancreas, which would be able to make most dosing decisions without the wearer's intervention, could be available within the next few years.

Type 1 diabetes develops when the islet cells of the human pancreas stop producing adequate amounts of insulin, leaving the body unable to regulate blood-sugar levels on its own. Left unchecked, glucose fluctuations over the long term can lead to nerve damage, blindness, stroke and heart attacks. Even among the most vigilant diabetics, large dips and surges in glucose levels are still common occurrences. "We have data on hand today that suggests that you could get much better diabetes outcomes with the computer taking the lead instead of the person with diabetes doing it all themselves," says Aaron Kowalski, research director of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation's Artificial Pancreas Project.

At its most basic level, an artificial pancreas consists of three components: a continuous sensor to detect glucose levels in real time, a miniature computer that can take those readings and use an algorithm to predict what will happen next and determine how much insulin is necessary to keep the levels steady, and an insulin pump driven by the computer that doses out the appropriate amount of the drug.

Two of the components--insulin pumps and continuous glucose monitors--are already on the commercial market (the latter received marketing approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration just a few years ago). "In the near term, you could probably create a pretty robust system with today's technologies," says Kowalski, whose group has spearheaded a coalition aimed at bringing an artificial pancreas to market as soon as possible.

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Members of the consortium are experimenting with variations of this closed-loop system, so named because the computer algorithm connects the insulin pump and the glucose monitor, closing the loop. Perhaps the person closest to developing a commercial system is Roman Hovorka, a principal research associate at the University of Cambridge, in the U.K., where he leads the Diabetes Modelling Group. His first closed-loop study examined the effectiveness of the system when used overnight, during the hours when blood-sugar levels are likely to drop precipitously and complications can occur. "I want to move to an approach that could be commercialized, and the simplest is just to close the loop overnight, at a time when one cannot do too much about insulin anyway."

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travism

8 Comments

  • 1283 Days Ago
  • 08/09/2008

Wouldn't it be great...

This would be a great "cure" for diabetes if the device could even make its own insulin.  How hard would it be to make a little insulin producing "fermenter" chamber, full of appropriately modified insulin producing bacteria, which could produce insulin out of components it is able to extract from the blood.

That would result in a zero maintenance device which could conceivably keep going for years without even needing to top it up.

Reply

phoenix

172 Comments

  • 1283 Days Ago
  • 08/09/2008

Re: Wouldn't it be great...

An interesting and innovative concept, but can it work? Perhaps you could ask someone with a medically related background to give you some feedback. Although this is not my field of expertise, Iv'e learned that great ideas can sometimes have the most humble of beginnings.

Reply

NovaLand

1 Comment

  • 1282 Days Ago
  • 08/10/2008

Re: Wouldn't it be great...

You're not that far off. In fact, transplantation of cells creating insulin have been tested, but the usual rejection problems occurred. They're thinking of making a "coat" for the cells so they wont get rejected. Compare that to an insulin pump creating insulin by its own, inluding regulating the levels and you see where we're going.

Reply

ms

190 Comments

  • 1282 Days Ago
  • 08/10/2008

typo

"a continuous sensor to detect insulin levels in real time"
You mean glucose level?

Reply

nfarrell22

1 Comment

  • 1280 Days Ago
  • 08/12/2008

Re: typo

Yes, part of the calculation needs to know how much curculating insilin. As a Type II I manufacture too much insulin ans my body tries to overcome the insulin resistance that is part of the desease.

Reply

Brittany Sauser

46 Comments

  • 1272 Days Ago
  • 08/20/2008

Re: typo

ms,

Yes, the article now says "glucose". Thanks for noticing this typo.

Brittany

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Buckwheat469

34 Comments

  • 1280 Days Ago
  • 08/12/2008

Good start

This is a good start on what should have been created already, but I understand that the FDA gets in the way and there's not much incentive in producing a device for only 23.6 million people (http://diabetes.niddk.nih.gov/dm/pubs/statistics/).

I would try something like this, as a type 1 diabetic, but I would prefer a watch-style glucometer. It's a good interim product and could diminish the need for carrying blood glucose meters around everywhere, and reduce the overall cost of buying test strips (for those who don't know, it's $60+ for a box which might last a month).

This device, however, is not what type 1 diabetics need. We really need a fix. Our pancreas isn't broken, like many type 2's, it's being suppressed by our immune systems (for the most part). While devices like these help the immediate issues, they only slow progress toward finding a cure by making the public forget that we have a life threatening and economic problem.

Type 1 diabetes isn't a choice, it wasn't caused by overeating or getting old, it's not a genetic disease in most cases, and it's not something you catch. It's a luck of the draw disease that anyone can get, which is why it is absolutely something that deserves a cure. Type 2, in my opinion, is something that could benefit from a fancy device since type 2 is mostly caused by lifestyle or age.

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