A closed-loop insulin pump with continuous glucose monitor produced significantly better blood glucose control in patients who have received islet cell transplants after pancreatectomy, compared with regular insulin injections, a pilot study has found.
Fourteen adults who received auto-islet transplants after pancreatectomy for chronic pancreatitis were randomized either to receive a closed-loop insulin pump system or the usual treatment of multiple insulin injections for 72 hours after transition from intravenous to subcutaneous insulin following surgery.
Researchers observed a significantly lower mean serum glucose in the insulin pump group, compared with the control group, with the highest average serum glucose level in individual patients in the pump group still being lower than the lowest average in the control group.
These improvements in glycemia were not associated with an increased risk of hypoglycemia in the closed-loop pump group and patients in the closed-loop pump group also required a significantly lower total daily insulin dose than did the control group, according to a paper published Nov. 20 in the American Journal of Transplantation.
“Success of islet engraftment is heavily dependent on maintenance of narrow-range euglycemia in the post-transplant period,” wrote Dr. Gregory P. Forlenza of the University of Minnesota Medical Center, Minneapolis, and his coauthors (Am J Transplant. 2015 Nov 20. doi: 10.1111/ajt.13539).
“This technology was shown in this study to provide some statistically and clinically significant improvements in glycemic parameters in adults after TP [total pancreatectomy] with IAT [intraportal islet autotransplantation] without producing associated increased episodes of hypoglycemia or adverse events.”
The study was funded by the Vikings Children’s Research Fund and the University of Minnesota. Medtronic Diabetes provided supplies as part of an investigator-initiated grant. No conflicts of interest were declared.