Artificial Pancreas goes on sale (in Australia)

Status
Not open for further replies.

Nyadach

Well-Known Member
Relationship to Diabetes
Type 1
Well, it's arrived finally. Ok on the other side of the world at a silly price. But the artificial pancreas is now for sale. It does sound a very early version of one though without a lot of the features of the ones currently in trials over here:

Link here, but I'll cut and past it to save the hassle

A four-year-old boy living in Perth, Australia has become the first person in the world to be fitted with an artificial pancreas that is a wearable computer today (21 January) at the Princess Margaret Hospital for Children.

Xavier Hames has type 1 diabetes, a condition whereby the pancreas does not produce any insulin, a hormone which is responsible for controlling the amount of glucose in the blood.

If the amount of glucose in the blood is too high, over time it can damage the body's organs.

Rather than having to endure daily insulin injections or submit to having tubes inserted under the skin connected to a black box that acts as an insulin pump, Xavier has been fitted with a new device that is worn in a small pouch at the waist.

Of course, portable insulin pumps already exist, but only a small amount of patients have access to them and none have ever been this advanced.

The device, which is the result of extensive clinical trials in Australia over the last five years, comes with a small computer inside it programmed to run a hypoglycaemia predictive algorithm.

Working together with a sensor and plastic tube pushed under the skin, the computer monitors glucose levels and only delivers insulin to the body when it is needed.

With type 1 diabetes, any change in blood glucose levels can be bad, and hypoglycemic attacks are triggered by low glucose levels, which can cause dizziness, loss of consciousness, and in extreme cases, seizures or comas.

"Most parents have to get up two or three times a night to check glucose levels and this might make them feel a little safer at night time if they know they've got this automated system that's going to prevent low glucose," Professor Tim Jones of Perth's Princess Margaret Hospital told ABC.

The device is now commercially available and presently costs AUD$10,000 ($8,183, £5,402). It can be used by both adults and children.

"It's just as important in adults if they're living alone or at risk of having problems with their glucose levels. It'll work in any age group," he said.

Over time, Jones says the device will be become cheaper and more accessible.

While the device is a great step forward in treating type 1 diabetes, it is merely the first step for the hospital's researchers in their quest to create a fully automatic device that can constantly monitor blood sugar and adjust insulin levels, without any need for patients to self-diagnose their glucose levels with skin-prick tests.
 
All turned out to be yet another bunch of stupid press. All it was, was a new pump released (Medtronic 640g) which is just a fancy pump which can with a CGM predict a hypo and reduce or stop injecting if it thinks it needs to. It was all just stupid press not having a clue again :( Utterly annoying!
 
All turned out to be yet another bunch of stupid press. All it was, was a new pump released (Medtronic 640g) which is just a fancy pump which can with a CGM predict a hypo and reduce or stop injecting if it thinks it needs to. It was all just stupid press not having a clue again :( Utterly annoying!

I did suspect that - a lot of the US press has been calling that an artificial pancreas, whereas we would call it a pump plus CGM 🙄 There are people using 'proper APs' but they are still very much prototypes in clinical trials. A real one will not only deliver insulin in response to high glucose levels but also glucagon in response to low ones - just like a real pancreas!

Still a few years to go, I think.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top