Hollow fiber-combined glucose-responsive gel technology as an in vivo electronics-free insulin delivery system.
Akira MatsumotoHirohito KuwataShinichiro KimuraHiroko MatsumotoKozue OchiYuki Moro-OkaAkiko WatanabeHironori YamadaHitoshi IshiiTaiki MiyazawaSiyuan ChenToshiaki BabaHiroshi YoshidaTaichi NakamuraHiroshi InoueYoshihiro OgawaMiyako TanakaYuji MiyaharaTakayoshi SuganamiPublished in: Communications biology (2020)
Accumulating evidence demonstrates that not only sustained elevation of blood glucose levels but also the glucose fluctuation represents key determinants for diabetic complications and mortality. Current closed-loop insulin therapy option is limited to the use of electronics-based systems, although it poses some technical issues with high cost. Here we demonstrate an electronics-free, synthetic boronate gel-based insulin-diffusion-control device technology that can cope with glucose fluctuations and potentially address the electronics-derived issues. The gel was combined with hemodialysis hollow fibers and scaled suitable for rats, serving as a subcutaneously implantable, insulin-diffusion-active site in a manner dependent on the subcutaneous glucose. Continuous glucose monitoring tests revealed that our device not only normalizes average glucose level of rats, but also markedly ameliorates the fluctuations over timescale of a day without inducing hypoglycemia. With inherent stability, diffusion-dependent scalability, and week-long & acute glucose-responsiveness, our technology may offer a low-cost alternative to current electronics-based approaches.
Keyphrases
- blood glucose
- glycemic control
- type diabetes
- low cost
- blood pressure
- wound healing
- randomized controlled trial
- stem cells
- liver failure
- insulin resistance
- single cell
- weight loss
- cardiovascular events
- mesenchymal stem cells
- hepatitis b virus
- intensive care unit
- coronary artery disease
- cell therapy
- respiratory failure
- cancer therapy
- liquid chromatography
- acute respiratory distress syndrome