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Multivariable Adaptive Closed-Loop Control of an Artificial Pancreas Without Meal and Activity Announcement

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posted on 2015-09-21, 00:00 authored by Kamuran Turksoy, Elif Seyma Bayrak, Lauretta Quinn, Elizabeth Littlejohn, Ali Cinar
Background: Accurate closed-loop control is essential for developing artificial pancreas (AP) systems that adjust insulin infusion rates from insulin pumps. Glucose concentration information from continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) systems is the most important information for the control system. Additional physiological measurements can provide valuable information that can enhance the accuracy of the control system. Proportional-integral-derivative control and model predictive control have been popular in AP development. Their implementations to date rely on meal announcements (e.g., bolus insulin dose based on insulin:carbohydrate ratios) by the user. Adaptive control techniques provide a powerful alternative that do not necessitate any meal or activity announcements. Materials and Methods: Adaptive control systems based on the generalized predictive control framework are developed by extending the recursive modeling techniques. Physiological signals such as energy expenditure and galvanic skin response are used along with glucose measurements to generate a multiple-input–single-output model for predicting future glucose concentrations used by the controller. Insulin-on-board (IOB) is also estimated and used in control decisions. The controllers were tested with clinical studies that include seven cases with three different patients with type 1 diabetes for 32 or 60 h without any meal or activity announcements. Results: The adaptive control system kept glucose concentration in the normal preprandial and postprandial range (70– 180mg/dL) without any meal or activity announcements during the test period. After IOB estimation was added to the control system, mild hypoglycemic episodes were observed only in one of the four experiments. This was reflected in a plasma glucose value of 56mg/dL (YSI 2300 STAT; Yellow Springs Instrument, Yellow Springs, OH) and a CGM value of 63mg/dL). Conclusions: Regulation of blood glucose concentration with an AP using adaptive control techniques was successful in clinical studies, even without any meal and physical activity announcement.

Funding

Funding from the National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases grant RO1 DK 085611 is gratefully acknowledged.

History

Publisher Statement

This is a copy of an article published in the Diabetes Technology and Therapeutics © 2013 Copyright Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.; Diabetes Technology and Therapeutics is available online at: http://www.liebertonline.com.

Publisher

Mary Ann Liebert

Language

  • en_US

issn

1520-9156

Issue date

2013-05-01

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