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Matchbox-sized monitor helps keep blood sugar levels normal
LONDON: Scientists have successfully employed an "artificial pancreas" system of pumps and monitors to improve blood sugar control in diabetes patients in the first study to show the new device works better than conventional treatment.
Researchers from Britain's Cambridge University tested the device on 17 children with Type 1 diabetes during a series of nights in hospital and found it kept their blood sugar levels within the important "normal" range 60 percent of the time.
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Medical device makers have been working for years to develop a so-called artificial pancreas to deliver insulin to patients with Type 1 diabetes, an autoimmune disease in which the body destroys its own ability to make insulin.
The bodies of Type 1 diabetes sufferers become unable to properly break down sugar and if untreated, blood vessels and nerves are destroyed, organs fail and patients die.
"These devices could transform the management of Type 1 diabetes, but it is likely to be a gradual process," Roman Hovorka of Cambridge University, who led the research, said in a telephone interview.
The ultimate goal is to create a device that can check patients blood day and night, during and between meals, and deliver insulin as required.
But Hovorka said that although the results were "an important stepping stone" towards bringing an artificial pancreas to the commercial market, he predicted it would take several years of refinement before one would be available for patients to use in daily life.
"It's a bit like the situation with mobile phones. When we started, the technology wasn't very good and the functionality was limited, and it took a number of generations to move to the device that we have now. I see the same thing with this system."
The Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation said last month it was teaming up with US pharmaceutical company Johnson & Johnson's unit Animas, which makes insulin pumps, and DexCom Inc, which makes continuous glucose monitoring devices, to develop and test an artificial pancreas system.
The Cambridge study, published in The Lancet medical journal on Friday, used devices and sensors from Smiths Medical, Abbott Diabetes Care and Medtronic.
The study found the new device performed better than a conventional pump, which delivers insulin at pre-set rates and which keeps blood sugar levels around normal 40 percent of the time.
However, Hovorka said the findings were particularly encouraging because the study included nights when the children went to bed after eating a large evening meal or having done exercise, both of which can affect blood sugar levels.
Reuters