Neural-Net Artificial Pancreas: A Randomized Crossover Trial of a First-in-Class Automated Insulin Delivery Algorithm.

Journal: Diabetes technology & therapeutics
PMID:

Abstract

Automated insulin delivery (AID) is now integral to the clinical practice of type 1 diabetes (T1D). The objective of this pilot-feasibility study was to introduce a new regulatory and clinical paradigm-a Neural-Net Artificial Pancreas (NAP)-an encoding of an AID algorithm into a neural network that approximates its action and assess NAP versus the original AID algorithm. The University of Virginia Model-Predictive Control (UMPC) algorithm was encoded into a neural network, creating its NAP approximation. Seventeen AID users with T1D were recruited and 15 participated in two consecutive 20-h hotel sessions, receiving in random order either NAP or UMPC. Their demographic characteristics were ages 22-68 years old, duration of diabetes 7-58 years, gender 10/5 female/male, White Non-Hispanic/Black 13/2, and baseline glycated hemoglobin 5.4%-8.1%. The time-in-range (TIR) difference between NAP and UMPC, adjusted for entry glucose level, was 1 percentage point, with absolute TIR values of 86% (NAP) and 87% (UMPC). The two algorithms achieved similar times <70 mg/dL of 2.0% versus 1.8% and coefficients of variation of 29.3% (NAP) versus 29.1 (UMPC)%. Under identical inputs, the average absolute insulin-recommendation difference was 0.031 U/h. There were no serious adverse events on either controller. NAP had sixfold lower computational demands than UMPC. In a randomized crossover study, a neural-network encoding of a complex model-predictive control algorithm demonstrated similar performance, at a fraction of the computational demands. Regulatory and clinical doors are therefore open for contemporary machine-learning methods to enter the AID field. Clinical Trial Registration number: NCT05876273.

Authors

  • Boris Kovatchev
    University of Virginia Center for Diabetes Technology, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, VA, USA.
  • Alberto Castillo
    Center for Diabetes Technology, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA.
  • Elliott Pryor
    Center for Diabetes Technology, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA.
  • Laura L Kollar
    Center for Diabetes Technology, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA.
  • Charlotte L Barnett
    Center for Diabetes Technology, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA.
  • Mark D DeBoer
    University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USA.
  • Sue A Brown
    Center for Diabetes Technology, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA.