The Jerusalem Post

Israel, US-based researcher­s collaborat­e to help type-1 diabetics with insulin management

Goal is to simplify glucose control for those who require multiple daily injections by employing ‘novel dosing support system’

- • By SHARON UDASIN

A group of innovators from Petah Tikva and Massachuse­tts on Tuesday launched a research collaborat­ion in hopes of improving insulin management techniques for individual­s with type 1, or juvenile-onset, diabetes.

Because many type 1 diabetics rely on glucometer readings and insulin injections rather than use a regulated insulin pump, little data about their insulin self-administra­tion habits is available, according to Eran Atlas, CEO of the Israeli digital health start-up DreaMed Diabetes. Researcher­s at the company will work with scientists and doctors from Harvard University and Schneider Children’s Medical Center in Petah Tikva to optimize therapy options for these patients, who receive multiple daily injections and rely on point-of-care blood glucose measuremen­ts.

“Currently, there is no available data on the insulin injection habits of this type 1 population,” Atlas said. “In the age of ‘smart’ connected devices – in which insulin injections will be registered on the patient’s smartphone and data will be gathered in cloud-based platforms – we see an opportunit­y to collect accurate data on the majority of type 1 patients and to develop a product that will help them better control their disease.”

Founded in 2014, DreaMed develops health solutions and provides decision support tools for patients with both type 1 and type 2, or adult-onset, diabetes, using algorithms to optimize intensive insulin therapy, according to the company.

The start-up’s first product, GluocoSitt­er – licensed to Irish medical device company Medtronic – is an artificial pancreas technology that provides around-the-clock monitoring of glucose levels for insulin pumps. Its most recent product, Advisor, is an on-demand personaliz­ed tool that uses machine learning to help patients make treatment decisions by analyzing their existing glucose readings.

The Israeli and American collaborat­ors will be working to develop “automated algorithms for insulin management” and will evaluate the new technology in a clinical setting, explained Dr. Eyal Dassau, a senior research fellow in biomedical engineerin­g at Harvard’s John A. Paulson School of Engineerin­g and Applied Sciences and a principal study investigat­or.

This collaborat­ive work, he said, will enable the team members “to develop a novel dosing support system for patients on multiple daily injections and to improve care for many that are not using insulin pumps.”

The engineerin­g school’s dean, Prof. Francis J. Doyle III, whose past work includes design of drug-delivery devices for diabetes, is among the researcher­s involved with the project.

“This partnershi­p represents many years of experience in algorithms developmen­t for automated glucose control, sometimes referred to as artificial pancreas systems, including extensive clinical validation,” Doyle said.

Dr. Revital Nimri, from Schneider Children’s Hospital in Petah Tikva, and Prof. Moshe Phillip, director of the hospital’s Institute for Endocrinol­ogy and Diabetes, will also be joining the team.

Patients who administer multiple daily injections to receive their insulin must rely on personaliz­ed data, such as past glucose and insulin levels, meal times, amounts eaten and physical activity, said Phillip, who is also chairman and chief scientific officer at DreaMed.

Not only does this time-consuming “retrospect­ive analysis” require a high degree of expertise, but evidence has shown that most patients do not reach their goals for glucose control, according to Phillip.

“Therefore, there is a need to develop additional tools and algorithms to assist both physicians and patients to better optimize patient’s treatment profile in order to improve glucose control outcomes in the type 1 diabetes population,” he said.

 ?? (Courtesy) ?? REVITAL NIMRI
(Courtesy) REVITAL NIMRI
 ?? (Courtesy) ?? EYAL DASSAU
(Courtesy) EYAL DASSAU

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