Kuwait Times

Pioneering diabetes device gives new solution for diabetic Kuwaiti children

Pioneering device helps deliver insulin by bypassing the skin

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KUWAIT: Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children in London (GOSH) have successful­ly treated a British diabetic boy with a skin allergy to insulin thanks to a pioneering device which helps deliver insulin by bypassing the skin. Taylor Banks, nine, from the UK is the fifth child in the world to be fitted with a device with delivers insulin directly to his abdomen so it does not come into contact with his skin. Type 1 diabetes affects around 35 million people in the Middle East region, including around 61,000 children.

Allergies to insulin is rare, with an estimated incidence of <1% to 2.4% in insulin-treated diabetic patients, however the severity of skin reactions to insulin in this case were very unique. The youngster was first diagnosed with type 1 diabetes - where the body’s immune system attacks and destroys the cells that produce insulin - when he was two. He was rushed to hospital unconsciou­s and treated with insulin which treated his diabetes but prompted a severe allergic reaction to the drug.

Speaking on Taylor’s experience having an insulin allergy, Taylor’s mother Gema Westwell said, “Straight after taking the injections he would go into a trance-like state, he was like a zombie, unable to communicat­e and function. We switched Taylor to an insulin pump hoping it would help, but then he started breaking out with painful red welts all over his body. It was so upsetting because nothing we were trying to do was helping to take the pain away. These welts eventually turned into permanent areas of abnormally sunken skin, into which no insulin could be given.” His symptoms worsened until the youngster was in constant pain and his parents had to check his sugar levels throughout the day and night to make sure he did not slip into unconsciou­sness.

Potential option

When he was seven, doctors discovered his allergy to insulin was only skin deep, and he was referred to Great Ormond Street Hospital for children in London (GOSH), which treats over 1,500 children from the Middle East every year. Dr Rakesh Amin, pediatric consultant in endocrinol­ogy at GOSH said, “Taylor’s quality of life was so poor and his prognosis so bleak that to not find a solution to this allergy was not an option.” After a number of ideas were explored, earlier this year Dr Amin identified a device that connects an insulin pump device to the abdominal cavity, so the drug bypasses the skin, as a potential option to treat Taylor’s condition.

Last month, Taylor became the first child in the UK, and the fifth in the world, to be fitted with the device, GOSH said. ‘’This case nicely illustrate­s, that although we help manage children with common diabetes, the GOSH Diabetes Service particular­ly specialize­s in rare forms of diabetes or rare diabetes related complicati­ons. Our multidisci­plinary team has unique skills sets and we try hard to find solutions using the latest technologi­es. We approach each child and young person as individual­s, and aim to improve how each family is able to live with diabetes,’’ Dr Amin explains.

Taylor’s father Scott Banks concluded, “It’s still early days but we’ve already noticed the changes. Most importantl­y Taylor’s blood sugar levels are significan­tly lower and much more balanced. He isn’t in any pain, he hasn’t had any reaction in his skin and he’s sleeping better. For the first time Taylor identified on his own when he was having a hypo, which is just brilliant. This progressio­n means everything to us. We’re so grateful to Dr Amin and GOSH and to all of the nurses and doctors who have helped Taylor. I just hope now that this will help him to have a chance at being a normal little boy, back in school and playing with his friends. He’s missed out on so much because he’s been so ill for so long, I hope this Dia Port will help Taylor get his childhood back.”

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 ??  ?? Taylor, aged 9
Taylor, aged 9

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