The Jesse Z and Sara Lea Shafer Institute for Endocrinology and Diabetes, National Center for Childhood Diabetes, Schneider Children's Medical Center of Israel, Petah Tikva, Israel.
Pediatr Diabetes. 2014 Mar;15(2):91-9. doi: 10.1111/pedi.12071. Epub 2013 Aug 15.
Artificial pancreas (AP) systems have shown an improvement in glucose control and a reduced risk of nocturnal hypoglycemia under controlled conditions but remain to be evaluated under daily-life conditions.
To assess the feasibility, safety, and efficacy of the MD-Logic AP in controlling nocturnal glucose levels in the patient's home.
Two-arm study, each covering four consecutive nights comparing the MD-Logic AP ('closed-loop' arm) with sensor-augmented pump therapy ('control' arm). Fifteen patients (mean age 19 ± 10.4 yr, A1c 7.5 ± 0.5% or 58 ± 5.9 mmol/mol, diabetes duration 9.9 ± 8.2 yr) were randomly assigned either to 'Group A' (first 'closed-loop', then 'control' arm) or to 'Group B' (vice versa). Investigators were masked to treatment intervention. Primary endpoints were the time spent with glucose levels below 70 mg/dL and the percentage of nights in which the mean overnight glucose levels were within 90-140 mg/dL. Endpoint analyses were based on unmodified sensor glucose readings of the four study nights.
Time of glucose levels spent below 70 mg/dL was significantly shorter on the closed-loop nights than on control nights, median and interquartile range 3.8 (0, 11.6) and 48.7 (0.6, 67.9) min, respectively; p = 0.0034. The percentage of individual nights in which mean overnight glucose level was within 90-140 mg/dL was 67 (33, 88), and 50 (25, 75), under closed-loop and control nights, respectively, with no statistical difference. Secondary endpoint analyses demonstrated significant improvements in hypoglycemia parameters. No serious adverse events were reported.
This interim analysis demonstrates the feasibility, safety, and efficiency of the MD-Logic AP system in home use, and demonstrates an improvement over sensor-augmented pump therapy. (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT01726829).
人工胰腺(AP)系统在控制条件下已显示出改善血糖控制和降低夜间低血糖风险的效果,但仍需在日常生活条件下进行评估。
评估 MD-Logic AP 在患者家中控制夜间血糖水平的可行性、安全性和疗效。
两臂研究,每臂连续四晚比较 MD-Logic AP(“闭环”臂)与传感器增强型泵治疗(“对照”臂)。15 名患者(平均年龄 19 ± 10.4 岁,A1c 7.5 ± 0.5%或 58 ± 5.9 mmol/mol,糖尿病病程 9.9 ± 8.2 年)被随机分配到“组 A”(先“闭环”,后“对照”臂)或“组 B”(反之亦然)。研究人员对治疗干预措施不知情。主要终点是血糖水平低于 70mg/dL 的时间以及夜间平均血糖水平在 90-140mg/dL 范围内的夜间百分比。终点分析基于四项研究夜间未经修改的传感器血糖读数。
闭环夜间血糖水平低于 70mg/dL 的时间明显短于对照夜间,中位数和四分位距分别为 3.8(0,11.6)和 48.7(0.6,67.9)分钟;p = 0.0034。平均夜间血糖水平在 90-140mg/dL 范围内的夜间百分比分别为 67(33,88)和 50(25,75),闭环和对照夜间无统计学差异。次要终点分析显示低血糖参数有显著改善。没有报告严重不良事件。
这项中期分析表明,MD-Logic AP 系统在家用中具有可行性、安全性和有效性,并证明优于传感器增强型泵治疗。(ClinicalTrials.gov 标识符 NCT01726829)。