Type 1 Diabetes Technology

Type 1 Diabetes (T1D) is a chronic autoimmune disease in which the immune system selectively destroys the insulin-producing beta cells located in the Islets of Langerhans within the pancreas. The result is absolute insulin deficiency, requiring lifelong exogenous insulin for survival. It accounts for approximately 5–10% of all diabetes cases globally, affecting an estimated 9 million people worldwide.
Classic Presenting Symptoms (the '4 Ts')
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Toilet — Polyuria: excessive, frequent urination including nocturia
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Thirsty — Polydipsia: extreme, unrelenting thirst from osmotic diuresis
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Tired — Profound fatigue due to cellular glucose starvation
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Thinner — Unexplained rapid weight loss as body catabolises fat and muscle
Additional Symptoms
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Blurred vision (osmotic lens changes)
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Genital thrush / skin infections (glucose-rich urine feeds yeasts)
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Slow wound healing
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Mood changes, irritability, difficulty concentrating
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Insulin Delivery Devices
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Insulin pens (reusable or disposable): standard delivery; half-unit dosing pens available for children and insulin-sensitive adults
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Smart insulin pens: Bluetooth-enabled pens (NovoPen 6, InPen) that log dose timing and amount; sync with CGM data
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Insulin pumps (CSII): continuous subcutaneous infusion via cannula; programmable basal rates; delivers boluses on demand
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Inhaled insulin: Afrezza — ultra-rapid inhaled insulin for bolus use; not suitable for all patients
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Hybrid Closed-Loop (HCL) Systems — Detail
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HCL systems integrate a CGM, insulin pump, and control algorithm to automatically modulate basal insulin delivery. The user still announces meals and administers bolus insulin, but the system handles background adjustments autonomously.
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CamAPS FX (CamDiab)
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Developed by the University of Cambridge; CE-marked; widely used in UK
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Adaptive model predictive control (MPC) algorithm; learns individual patterns over days
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Compatible with: Dana-i or Dana-RS pump + Dexcom G6 or G7
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NHS England: funded for all under 18s with T1D from April 2023; expanding to adults
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Includes dedicated pregnancy mode; specific elderly and toddler algorithms
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Ease feature allows temporary increase in target glucose (e.g. during exercise)
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Medtronic MiniMed 780G
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Auto-correction boluses every 5 minutes in addition to basal adjustment — more aggressive automation
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Default target 5.5 mmol/L (100 mg/dL); adjustable
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Compatible with Guardian 4 CGM (factory-calibrated, no finger-prick needed)
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SmartGuard algorithm; meal detection assists even without bolus announcement
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Tandem t:slim X2 with Control-IQ
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Automatic basal rate adjustments + correction boluses when glucose predicted to exceed 10 mmol/L
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Automatic 80% basal reduction when glucose predicted to fall below 3.9 mmol/L
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Sleep mode increases automation and targets tighter overnight range
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Updatable via software (touchscreen pump; over-the-air updates)
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Omni pod 5 (Insulet)
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Tubeless patch pump — no tubing; pod adheres directly to skin for up to 3 days
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SmartAdjust algorithm; controlled via dedicated handset or compatible Android phone
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Compatible with Dexcom G6; activity mode reduces insulin for exercise
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Open-Source / DIY Closed-Loop Systems
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Pioneered by the #WeAreNotWaiting community from 2014 onwards
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Loop (iOS): uses RileyLink/OrangeLink with compatible Omnipod Eros or older Medtronic pumps + Dexcom CGM
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AndroidAPS (AAPS): highly configurable; runs on Android phone; supports multiple pumps; oref1 algorithm with SMBs
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iAPS / Trio: advanced fork of OpenAPS/Loop; dynamic ISF and CR adjustment using Logarithmic algorithm
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Not CE-marked or NHS-approved for general use; used under informed consent by experienced users
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Vibrant online community via Facebook groups, Discord, and openaps.org
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Patch pumps: tubeless devices (Omnipod) worn directly on skin; controlled via smartphone
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Teplizumab (Tzield) — Disease Modification
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Anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody; modulates autoreactive T-cells to slow beta cell destruction
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FDA approved November 2022 — first drug to delay onset of Stage 3 T1D
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Delays clinical diagnosis by a median of >2 years in Stage 2 T1D (TNFAIP3 trial)
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14-day IV infusion; side effects include transient lymphopenia, rash, mild cytokine release
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Under regulatory review in EU and UK; not yet NHS approved
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Immunotherapy in New-Onset T1D
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Abatacept (CTLA-4 Ig): slows C-peptide decline; ongoing trials in new-onset T1D
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Anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG): single-dose immunotherapy preserving beta cell function at diagnosis
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GAD-alum (Diamyd): antigen-specific immunotherapy; Phase 3 trials; combined with vitamin D
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Combination immunotherapy approaches (e.g. teplizumab + GAD-alum) show additive promise
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Beta Cell Replacement
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Islet transplantation: established therapy for severe hypoglycaemia unawareness; requires lifelong immunosuppression; limited by donor supply
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Vertex VX-880 / VX-264: stem cell-derived fully differentiated beta cells; remarkable Phase 1/2 results (2023–24) — some participants achieving insulin independence
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VX-264 encapsulation device: aims to protect transplanted cells from immune attack — eliminating need for immunosuppression
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Sernova Cell Pouch: implantable scaffold facilitating islet transplantation with reduced immunosuppression
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Gene Therapy and Precision Medicine
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CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing: engineering immune tolerance or producing insulin in non-beta cells (liver, intestinal K-cells)
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HLA-specific cell therapies: producing patient-specific beta cells resistant to autoimmune attack
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Precision medicine: pharmacogenomics to tailor immunotherapy based on HLA type and autoantibody profile
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Glucose-Responsive ('Smart') Insulin
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Insulin analogues that automatically activate when blood glucose rises and inactivate when it normalises
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NNC2215 (Novo Nordisk): glucose-responsive insulin demonstrating proof-of-concept in Phase 2 trials
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Potential to eliminate hypoglycaemia from insulin therapy entirely
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Weekly or monthly ultra-long acting depot formulations in development (insulin icodec — weekly basal)
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T1D Screening Programmes
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ELSA (Early Surveillance for Autoimmune Diabetes) — NHS England programme offering autoantibody screening to relatives of people with T1D
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Germany's Fr1da study: population-wide screening in children; identifies Stage 1–2 T1D enabling education and future preventive therapy
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Goal: prevent DKA at diagnosis; allow access to disease-modifying therapy; inform family planning



