Wednesday, 9 January, at 15 - 16, Technical University of Denmark, Building 324 Auditorium 030.
Marcia Cescon, Harvard University, google scholar profile
Diabetes describes a group of metabolic diseases characterized by high blood glucose levels
(hyperglycemia), caused by lack of insulin secretion by the pancreas, insulin action or both.
The chronic diabetes hyperglycemia has multiple effects throughout the body associated with
damage, dysfunction and failure of various organs. Diabetes affects as many as 33.5 million
individuals in the United States with associated annual medical cost of $345 billion, and its
incidence is increasing at an alarming rate.
Current insulin therapies entail great effort, require frequent user intervention (insulin
administration and blood glucose measurements) and a high degree of expertise from
patients, caregivers and health care providers. Nevertheless, evidence shows failure to reach
the desired glycemic targets for the majority of the population with diabetes.
Although type 1 diabetes is currently incurable, automated insulin delivery systems can
considerably improve glycemic outcomes and the quality of life of insulin treated subjects,
leading to fewer complications and lower health care costs.
In this talk, I will present my contributions toward the development of decision support
systems for insulin therapy in type 1 diabetes. In particular I will introduce an advisory
system for once-a-day dosing of long-acting insulin analogs in multiple-daily-injection therapy,
an insulin infusion set failure detection system and some recent ideas on how to deal with disturbances other than meals.
All are welcome!