A Century of Diabetes Technology: Signals, Models, and Artificial Pancreas Control

Publication date: Available online 28 May 2019Source: Trends in Endocrinology & MetabolismAuthor(s): Boris KovatchevArguably, diabetes mellitus is one of the best-quantified human conditions: elaborate in silico models describe the action of the human metabolic system; real-time signals such as continuous glucose monitoring are readily available; insulin delivery is being automated; and control algorithms are capable of optimizing blood glucose fluctuation in patients’ natural environments. The transition of the artificial pancreas (AP) to everyday clinical use is happening now, and is contingent upon seamless concerted work of devices encompassing the patient in a digital treatment ecosystem. This review recounts briefly the story of diabetes technology, which began a century ago with the discovery of insulin, progressed through glucose monitoring and subcutaneous insulin delivery, and is now rapidly advancing towards fully automated clinically viable AP systems.
Source: Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism - Category: Endocrinology Source Type: research