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Integrating metabolic expenditure information from wearable fitness sensors into an AI-augmented automated insulin delivery system: a randomised clinical trial

BACKGROUND: Exercise can rapidly drop glucose in people with type 1 diabetes. Ubiquitous wearable fitness sensors are not integrated into automated insulin delivery (AID) systems. We hypothesised that an AID can automate insulin adjustments using real-time wearable fitness data to reduce hypoglycaem...

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Autores principales: Jacobs, Peter G, Resalat, Navid, Hilts, Wade, Young, Gavin M, Leitschuh, Joseph, Pinsonault, Joseph, El Youssef, Joseph, Branigan, Deborah, Gabo, Virginia, Eom, Jae, Ramsey, Katrina, Dodier, Robert, Mosquera-Lopez, Clara, Wilson, Leah M, Castle, Jessica R
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10557965/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37543512
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2589-7500(23)00112-7
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author Jacobs, Peter G
Resalat, Navid
Hilts, Wade
Young, Gavin M
Leitschuh, Joseph
Pinsonault, Joseph
El Youssef, Joseph
Branigan, Deborah
Gabo, Virginia
Eom, Jae
Ramsey, Katrina
Dodier, Robert
Mosquera-Lopez, Clara
Wilson, Leah M
Castle, Jessica R
author_facet Jacobs, Peter G
Resalat, Navid
Hilts, Wade
Young, Gavin M
Leitschuh, Joseph
Pinsonault, Joseph
El Youssef, Joseph
Branigan, Deborah
Gabo, Virginia
Eom, Jae
Ramsey, Katrina
Dodier, Robert
Mosquera-Lopez, Clara
Wilson, Leah M
Castle, Jessica R
author_sort Jacobs, Peter G
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Exercise can rapidly drop glucose in people with type 1 diabetes. Ubiquitous wearable fitness sensors are not integrated into automated insulin delivery (AID) systems. We hypothesised that an AID can automate insulin adjustments using real-time wearable fitness data to reduce hypoglycaemia during exercise and free-living conditions compared with an AID not automating use of fitness data. METHODS: Our study population comprised of individuals (aged 21–50 years) with type 1 diabetes from from the Harold Schnitzer Diabetes Health Center clinic at Oregon Health and Science University, OR, USA, who were enrolled into a 76 h single-centre, two-arm randomised (4-block randomisation), non-blinded crossover study to use (1) an AID that detects exercise, prompts the user, and shuts off insulin during exercise using an exercise-aware adaptive proportional derivative (exAPD) algorithm or (2) an AID that automates insulin adjustments using fitness data in real-time through an exercise-aware model predictive control (exMPC) algorithm. Both algorithms ran on iPancreas comprising commercial glucose sensors, insulin pumps, and smartwatches. Participants executed 1 week run-in on usual therapy followed by exAPD or exMPC for one 12 h primary in-clinic session involving meals, exercise, and activities of daily living, and 2 free-living out-patient days. Primary outcome was time below range (<3·9 mmol/L) during the primary in-clinic session. Secondary outcome measures included mean glucose and time in range (3·9–10 mmol/L). This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04771403. FINDINGS: Between April 13, 2021, and Oct 3, 2022, 27 participants (18 females) were enrolled into the study. There was no significant difference between exMPC (n=24) versus exAPD (n=22) in time below range (mean [SD] 1·3% [2·9] vs 2·5% [7·0]) or time in range (63·2% [23·9] vs 59·4% [23·1]) during the primary in-clinic session. In the 2 h period after start of in-clinic exercise, exMPC had significantly lower mean glucose (7·3 [1·6] vs 8·0 [1·7] mmol/L, p=0∙023) and comparable time below range (1·4% [4·2] vs 4·9% [14·4]). Across the 76 h study, both algorithms achieved clinical time in range targets (71·2% [16] and 75·5% [11]) and time below range (1·0% [1·2] and 1·3% [2·2]), significantly lower than run-in period (2·4% [2·4], p=0∙0004 vs exMPC; p=0∙012 vs exAPD). No adverse events occurred. INTERPRETATION: AIDs can integrate exercise data from smartwatches to inform insulin dosing and limit hypoglycaemia while improving glucose outcomes. Future AID systems that integrate exercise metrics from wearable fitness sensors may help people living with type 1 diabetes exercise safely by limiting hypoglycaemia. FUNDING: JDRF Foundation and the Leona M and Harry B Helmsley Charitable Trust, National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.
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spelling pubmed-105579652023-10-06 Integrating metabolic expenditure information from wearable fitness sensors into an AI-augmented automated insulin delivery system: a randomised clinical trial Jacobs, Peter G Resalat, Navid Hilts, Wade Young, Gavin M Leitschuh, Joseph Pinsonault, Joseph El Youssef, Joseph Branigan, Deborah Gabo, Virginia Eom, Jae Ramsey, Katrina Dodier, Robert Mosquera-Lopez, Clara Wilson, Leah M Castle, Jessica R Lancet Digit Health Article BACKGROUND: Exercise can rapidly drop glucose in people with type 1 diabetes. Ubiquitous wearable fitness sensors are not integrated into automated insulin delivery (AID) systems. We hypothesised that an AID can automate insulin adjustments using real-time wearable fitness data to reduce hypoglycaemia during exercise and free-living conditions compared with an AID not automating use of fitness data. METHODS: Our study population comprised of individuals (aged 21–50 years) with type 1 diabetes from from the Harold Schnitzer Diabetes Health Center clinic at Oregon Health and Science University, OR, USA, who were enrolled into a 76 h single-centre, two-arm randomised (4-block randomisation), non-blinded crossover study to use (1) an AID that detects exercise, prompts the user, and shuts off insulin during exercise using an exercise-aware adaptive proportional derivative (exAPD) algorithm or (2) an AID that automates insulin adjustments using fitness data in real-time through an exercise-aware model predictive control (exMPC) algorithm. Both algorithms ran on iPancreas comprising commercial glucose sensors, insulin pumps, and smartwatches. Participants executed 1 week run-in on usual therapy followed by exAPD or exMPC for one 12 h primary in-clinic session involving meals, exercise, and activities of daily living, and 2 free-living out-patient days. Primary outcome was time below range (<3·9 mmol/L) during the primary in-clinic session. Secondary outcome measures included mean glucose and time in range (3·9–10 mmol/L). This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04771403. FINDINGS: Between April 13, 2021, and Oct 3, 2022, 27 participants (18 females) were enrolled into the study. There was no significant difference between exMPC (n=24) versus exAPD (n=22) in time below range (mean [SD] 1·3% [2·9] vs 2·5% [7·0]) or time in range (63·2% [23·9] vs 59·4% [23·1]) during the primary in-clinic session. In the 2 h period after start of in-clinic exercise, exMPC had significantly lower mean glucose (7·3 [1·6] vs 8·0 [1·7] mmol/L, p=0∙023) and comparable time below range (1·4% [4·2] vs 4·9% [14·4]). Across the 76 h study, both algorithms achieved clinical time in range targets (71·2% [16] and 75·5% [11]) and time below range (1·0% [1·2] and 1·3% [2·2]), significantly lower than run-in period (2·4% [2·4], p=0∙0004 vs exMPC; p=0∙012 vs exAPD). No adverse events occurred. INTERPRETATION: AIDs can integrate exercise data from smartwatches to inform insulin dosing and limit hypoglycaemia while improving glucose outcomes. Future AID systems that integrate exercise metrics from wearable fitness sensors may help people living with type 1 diabetes exercise safely by limiting hypoglycaemia. FUNDING: JDRF Foundation and the Leona M and Harry B Helmsley Charitable Trust, National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. 2023-09 2023-08-03 /pmc/articles/PMC10557965/ /pubmed/37543512 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2589-7500(23)00112-7 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article under the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license.
spellingShingle Article
Jacobs, Peter G
Resalat, Navid
Hilts, Wade
Young, Gavin M
Leitschuh, Joseph
Pinsonault, Joseph
El Youssef, Joseph
Branigan, Deborah
Gabo, Virginia
Eom, Jae
Ramsey, Katrina
Dodier, Robert
Mosquera-Lopez, Clara
Wilson, Leah M
Castle, Jessica R
Integrating metabolic expenditure information from wearable fitness sensors into an AI-augmented automated insulin delivery system: a randomised clinical trial
title Integrating metabolic expenditure information from wearable fitness sensors into an AI-augmented automated insulin delivery system: a randomised clinical trial
title_full Integrating metabolic expenditure information from wearable fitness sensors into an AI-augmented automated insulin delivery system: a randomised clinical trial
title_fullStr Integrating metabolic expenditure information from wearable fitness sensors into an AI-augmented automated insulin delivery system: a randomised clinical trial
title_full_unstemmed Integrating metabolic expenditure information from wearable fitness sensors into an AI-augmented automated insulin delivery system: a randomised clinical trial
title_short Integrating metabolic expenditure information from wearable fitness sensors into an AI-augmented automated insulin delivery system: a randomised clinical trial
title_sort integrating metabolic expenditure information from wearable fitness sensors into an ai-augmented automated insulin delivery system: a randomised clinical trial
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10557965/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37543512
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2589-7500(23)00112-7
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