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Study Design and Data Analysis of Artificial Pancreas Device Systems with Closed-Loop Glucose-Sensing Insulin Delivery
Author(s) -
Sravya Shankara,
Yujia Liu,
Qingfeng Zheng,
Jing Guo,
Guixia Wang,
Bo Zhang
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of endocrinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.875
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1687-8345
pISSN - 1687-8337
DOI - 10.1155/2021/8812695
Subject(s) - medicine , investigational device exemption , artificial pancreas , food and drug administration , clinical trial , insulin delivery , clinical study design , randomized controlled trial , closed loop , population , medical physics , risk analysis (engineering) , surgery , engineering , diabetes mellitus , control engineering , type 1 diabetes , endocrinology , environmental health
Objective The objective of this article is to provide a high-profile review and discussion on the study design and statistical analysis of pivotal clinical trials conducted to demonstrate the safety and effectiveness of closed-loop investigational artificial pancreas device systems (APDSs) in premarket approval applications.Methods The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) guidance on the content of investigational device exemption and premarket approval applications for APDSs is reviewed with special emphasis on study design and statistical analysis of the pivotal clinical trials. The two pivotal studies for the MiniMed 670G hybrid closed-loop system by Medtronic in their premarket approval application are summarized and discussed.Results The United States FDA established detailed recommendations on the study design and statistical analysis of pivotal clinical trials for the industry that seek market investigational APDSs and for FDA scientific reviewers that regulate the device applications. The recommendations cover specifics regarding patient population, clinical endpoints, and strategies for data analysis. However, the two pivotal studies that demonstrated the effectiveness of the FDA-approved MiniMed 670G hybrid closed-loop system were not typical randomized controlled trials as per FDA recommendations.Conclusion The development and regulation of investigational APDSs require careful and sophisticated clinical study designs and data analysis in premarket approval applications. The regulatory evaluation process of the APDSs is rather complicated since the devices consist of multiple components that collaboratively function to mimic human pancreases.

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