Power of the Artificial Pancreas

Ingenuity / Kaylyn Christopher / 10.10.16

On the slopes of the Blue Ridge Mountains at Wintergreen Resort last winter, a group of teenagers participating in a weeklong ski and snowboard camp tested their abilities to maneuver through freshly fallen snow.

All of them knew firsthand the daily challenges of living with Type 1 diabetes. For many, the ski trip was the first time they were able to fully enjoy an extended stay away from home.

An hour from the resort, researchers at the University of Virginia’s Center for Diabetes Technology have spent years developing a smartphone that acts as an artificial pancreas – a device that automatically regulates blood sugar levels through customized insulin delivery. Thanks to a partnership between the center and Riding on Insulin, a program led by professional snowboarder Sean Busby that offers ski and snowboard camps for children with Type 1 diabetes, that week at Wintergreen provided the teens with a reprieve from the constant diligence required to monitor blood sugar levels – an ongoing task that so often limits their everyday lives.

“Having an artificial pancreas would mean more freedom and less worry for all of us,” said Mara Hallett, whose son, Thomas, tried out the device while attending the camp. “We have been so thankful to the doctors willing to do the research, which is bringing us closer to that reality.”

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A Simpler Lifestyle

This breakthrough could make a more carefree lifestyle attainable for those with diabetes. Activities that were once troublesome for those diagnosed can be done with less worry.

The artificial pancreas calculates how much insulin is needed after a meal.

Its mobility makes monitoring blood sugar levels during exercise possible.

Sugar levels during sleep are stabilized without disturbing the user.

The technology used by Hallett and his fellow campers last winter is currently being developed by TypeZero Technologies, a startup company in Charlottesville that licensed the UVA prototype system three years ago.

TypeZero is on the cusp of bringing the technology to market and providing diabetes patients with a method of treatment that makes their disease more manageable and better controlled.

“We’re moving the product forward closer to accessibility,” Chad Rogers, a 1997 graduate of the UVA McIntire School of Commerce and the CEO of TypeZero, said. “If we’re able to get this to market in the next 12 to 18 months, it will be a gigantic accomplishment for TypeZero as well as for the center. It would truly change the lives of a lot of patients with Type 1 diabetes.”

For the Center for Diabetes Technology’s director, Boris Kovatchev, a professor in UVA’s schools of Medicine and of Engineering and Applied Sciences, the artificial pancreas concept dates back to the 1990s.

Kovatchev came to UVA in 1992 with a background in mathematics. Through chance, or maybe fate, he crossed paths with researchers in the fields of endocrinology and diabetes.

“The researchers talked to me a little bit about the physiology related to diabetes and how people try to control it, and I started thinking mathematics could help,” Kovatchev said.

Kovatchev was no stranger to the disease, having witnessed and felt the effects within his own family.

“My father had diabetes, so I knew how difficult it can be to control,” he said. “There was no technology at that time, just an occasional finger stick or insulin injection.”

A spark was ignited in Kovatchev’s mind, leading him to narrow the focus of his research to diabetes technology. Then, in 1996, he secured his first grant from the National Institutes of Health to study the mathematical, quantitative understanding of the disease. Over the next several years, Kovatchev closely communicated with colleagues at UVA and experts at the University of Padova, Italy, to brainstorm new ways to manage and monitor diabetes using mathematical algorithms.

CGM Sensor: The continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) sensor is an electrode that is placed in the skin to measure glucose levels throughout the day.
CGM Receiver: A transmitter located on the CGM sensor sends information to the CGM receiver. The receiver displays real-time estimates of blood sugar levels and trends in graphs and charts.
Artificial Pancreas App: Blood sugar readings are sent from the CGM receiver to the smartphone where the artificial pancreas lives. The artificial pancreas uses an advanced algorithm to calculate custom insulin dosages to monitor and regulate blood glucose levels.
Insulin Pump: The artificial pancreas wirelessly sends information to the insulin pump, which is worn by the patient. The insulin pump delivers the insulin dose directly to the bloodstream.
CGM Sensor
CGM Receiver
Artificial Pancreas App
Insulin Pump

That brainstorming culminated on Dec. 19, 2005, when the idea for the artificial pancreas was born out of a meeting between JDRF (a diabetic research foundation), the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the NIH and experts in the field.

“Technology within the industry started to appear in the first few years of this century,” Kovatchev said. “In 2005, insulin pumps had been in use for a few years, but it became clear that it may be possible to assemble a system that could more closely control diabetes. At that time, though, no one knew whether or not it was going to work.”

Tools such as insulin pumps help patients manage diabetes, but still require action from the individual to monitor blood glucose levels and deliver insulin dosages. The artificial pancreas, on the other hand, eliminates the need for individual action by using algorithms to automatically monitor and regulate blood glucose levels through custom, calculated insulin dosages.

Then, in 2008, Kovatchev and his team had a breakthrough. Typically, once a device like the artificial pancreas comes out of the conceptual phase, it undergoes years of animal trials. Kovatchev wasn’t keen on that idea, and instead proposed to replace animal trials with those using a computer-based simulator that modeled the human metabolic system. The FDA approved, and that same year, after the computer simulations were successful, the first human studies involving the artificial pancreas began at the UVA Health System.

“At that time, the system worked on a laptop computer and had a lot of wires connecting the sensors to the person and the insulin pump,” Kovatchev said. “It was pretty bulky.”

If we pull it off, we will essentially change the course of diabetes medicine and completely turn the treatment of it around.”

The human trials, which required participants to be closely supervised in the hospital, demonstrated significant success, and Kovatchev and his colleagues wanted to progress to outpatient studies. First, however, they needed a more mobile device.

So a member of Kovatchev’s team transferred the entire system from the laptop to a smartphone, and, over time, made it operate wirelessly.

The smartphone is designed so that it “listens” to a sensor attached to the patient’s skin, and, using advanced algorithms that are linked to the sensor through wireless connections, the device gathers data from the metabolic system to then control the insulin pump so that it automatically adjusts insulin delivery.

Today, outpatient trials of the artificial pancreas have been conducted in 17 locations across the world, and the UVA Center for Diabetes Technology has become a hub for international research.

Users can view a detailed graph of their insulin delivery history for the entire day and in five-minute increments. Images courtesy TypeZero.

The app alerts users when blood glucose levels are too high or too low or are predicted to move out of range soon. Hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia checklists assist the user in troubleshooting high and low blood glucose. Images courtesy TypeZero.

The app allows users to enter comments related to their personal health and diabetes management, helping clinical study teams understand how health conditions impact blood glucose levels or the patient’s response to insulin. Images courtesy TypeZero.

   
 

The commercialization of the device for industry use would bring 20 years of conceptual research, development and clinical trials to life.

“If we pull it off, we will essentially change the course of diabetes medicine and completely turn the treatment of it around,” Kovatchev said.

And as Kovatchev thinks back to the study at Wintergreen, he is hopeful about what the realization of the artificial pancreas could mean for kids like Thomas Hallett.

“For the kids who have diabetes, I hope this can give them much more carefree and stable lives,” he said. “The complications of diabetes are severe, and the only proven treatment is stable blood sugar control. If we can ensure that, that will lead to better, longer, healthier lives.”