Adaptive and Personalized Plasma Insulin Concentration Estimation for Artificial Pancreas Systems.

2018
https://researcherprofiles.org/profile/228782150
29566547
Hajizadeh I, Rashid M, Samadi S, Feng J, Sevil M, Hobbs N, Lazaro C, Maloney Z, Brandt R, Yu X, Turksoy K, Littlejohn E, Cengiz E, Cinar A
Abstract

BACKGROUND

The artificial pancreas (AP) system, a technology that automatically administers exogenous insulin in people with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) to regulate their blood glucose concentrations, necessitates the estimation of the amount of active insulin already present in the body to avoid overdosing.

METHOD

An adaptive and personalized plasma insulin concentration (PIC) estimator is designed in this work to accurately quantify the insulin present in the bloodstream. The proposed PIC estimation approach incorporates Hovorka's glucose-insulin model with the unscented Kalman filtering algorithm. Methods for the personalized initialization of the time-varying model parameters to individual patients for improved estimator convergence are developed. Data from 20 three-days-long closed-loop clinical experiments conducted involving subjects with T1DM are used to evaluate the proposed PIC estimation approach.

RESULTS

The proposed methods are applied to the clinical data containing significant disturbances, such as unannounced meals and exercise, and the results demonstrate the accurate real-time estimation of the PIC with the root mean square error of 7.15 and 9.25 mU/L for the optimization-based fitted parameters and partial least squares regression-based testing parameters, respectively.

CONCLUSIONS

The accurate real-time estimation of PIC will benefit the AP systems by preventing overdelivery of insulin when significant insulin is present in the bloodstream.

Journal Issue
Volume 12 of Issue 3