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Anticipation of Historical Exercise Patterns by a Novel Artificial Pancreas System Reduces Hypoglycemia During and After Moderate-Intensity Physical Activity in People with Type 1 Diabetes
Author(s) -
José García-Tirado,
Sue A. Brown,
Nitchakarn Laichuthai,
Patricio Colmegna,
Chaitanya L.K. Koravi,
Başak Özaslan,
John P. Corbett,
Charlotte L. Barnett,
M Pajewski,
Mary C. Oliveri,
Helen E. Myers,
Marc D. Breton
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
diabetes technology and therapeutics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.142
H-Index - 88
eISSN - 1557-8593
pISSN - 1520-9156
DOI - 10.1089/dia.2020.0516
Subject(s) - medicine , hypoglycemia , glycemic , artificial pancreas , crossover study , diabetes mellitus , type 1 diabetes , type 2 diabetes , continuous glucose monitoring , endocrinology , alternative medicine , pathology , placebo
Objective: Physical activity is a major challenge to glycemic control for people with type 1 diabetes. Moderate-intensity exercise often leads to steep decreases in blood glucose and hypoglycemia that closed-loop control systems have so far failed to protect against, despite improving glycemic control overall. Research Design and Methods: Fifteen adults with type 1 diabetes (42 ± 13.5 years old; hemoglobin A 1c 6.6% ± 1.0%; 10F/5M) participated in a randomized crossover clinical trial comparing two hybrid closed-loop (HCL) systems, a state-of-the-art hybrid model predictive controller and a modified system designed to anticipate and detect unannounced exercise (APEX), during two 32-h supervised admissions with 45 min of planned moderate activity, following 4 weeks of data collection. Primary outcome was the number of hypoglycemic episodes during exercise. Continuous glucose monitor (CGM)-based metrics and hypoglycemia are also reported across the entire admissions. Results: The APEX system reduced hypoglycemic episodes overall (9 vs. 33; P  = 0.02), during exercise (5 vs. 13; P  = 0.04), and in the 4 h following (2 vs. 11; P  = 0.02). Overall CGM median percent time <70 mg/dL decreased as well (0.3% vs. 1.6%; P  = 0.004). This protection was obtained with no significant increase in time >180 mg/dL (18.5% vs. 16.6%, P  = 0.15). Overnight control was notable for both systems with no hypoglycemia, median percent in time 70-180 mg/dL at 100% and median percent time 70-140 mg/dL at ∼96% for both. Conclusions: A new closed-loop system capable of anticipating and detecting exercise was proven to be safe and feasible and outperformed a state-of-the-art HCL, reducing participants' exposure to hypoglycemia during and after moderate-intensity physical activity. ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03859401.

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