Artificial pancreas - a device which monitors blood glucose in patients with diabetes and automatically adjusts levels of insulin entering the body - is likely to be available by 2018.Currently available technology allows insulin pumps to deliver insulin to people with diabetes after taking readings from glucose meters, but these two components are separate. Researchers said it is the joining together of
both parts into a 'closed loop' that makes an artificial pancreas. The actual timeline to availability of the artificial pancreas, as with other medical devices, encompasses regulatory approvals of regulatory agencies such as the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which is currently reviewing one proposed artificial pancreas with approval possibly as soon as 2017.
Recent review by the UK National Institute of Health Research reported that automated closed-loop systems may be expected to appear in the European market by the end of 2018.
"In trials to date, users have been positive about how use of an artificial pancreas gives them 'time off' or a 'holiday' from their diabetes management, since the system is managing their blood sugar effectively without the need for constant monitoring by the user," said Roman Hovorka and Hood Thabit of the University of Cambridge in the UK.
One part of the clinical need for the artificial pancreas is the variability of insulin requirements between and within individuals - on one day a person could use one third of their normal requirements, and on another three times what they normally would.
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