PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Longest and largest study of insulin pumps to treat type 1 diabetes in children shows they control blood sugar more effectively and with fewer complications than injections

2013-08-19
(Press-News.org) The longest and largest study of the effectiveness of insulin pumps to treat type 1 diabetes in children has shown that the pumps are more effective at controlling blood sugar than insulin injections and cause fewer complications. The research is published in Diabetologia, the journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes, and is by Associate Professor Elizabeth Davis, Princess Margaret Hospital for Children, Perth, WA, Australia and colleagues.

The increasing use of insulin pump therapy over the last 15 years, particularly in children, has been driven by improvements in pump technology, the availability of insulin analogues, plus factors such as the results of the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial which established the benefits offered by improved blood sugar control. Despite this increased use, the outcomes of pump therapy continue to be debated. However there has been inadequate research into the long term effects of pump therapy in children, with many studies too short in duration or not recruiting enough patients.

In this study, a total of 345 patients on pump therapy were matched to controls on injections, with a mean age 11 years (range 2-19 years), with a mean duration of diabetes at the start of pump therapy of 4.1 years (range 6 months to 15.5 years) and a follow up of 3.5 years (range 0-10.5 years). The mean HbA1c reduction (a standard method for measuring blood glucose control) in the pump cohort was 0.6% (6.6 mmol/mol). This improved HbA1c remained significant until seven years of follow up (at which point the numbers in the study were too small to analyse the results with statistical confidence). Both groups started with the same HbA1c and max difference was 1% difference at 6 yrs: 7.6 % in the pump group and 8.6 % in the non-pump group.

Pump therapy reduced episodes of severe hypoglycaemia (dangerously low blood glucose) from 14.7 to 7.2 events per 100 patients per year. In contrast, severe hypoglycaemia increased in the non-pump cohort over the same period from 6.8 to 10.2 events per 100 patients per year (probably due to random variation). The rate of admission for diabetic ketoacidosis (a shortage of insulin causing the body to switch to burning fats and producing acidic ketone molecules which cause complications and symptoms, a frequent complication in children with T1DM) was lower in the pump cohort than in the non-pump cohort (2.3 vs 4.7 per 100 patients per year) during follow up.

Of the 345 patients on pump therapy, 38 ceased pump therapy during the course of the study; 6 of these were in the first year of treatment, 7 in the second year of treatment, 10 in the third year of treatment with the remainder ceasing treatment after at least 3 sequential years on pump therapy. Some children stop because they become tired of the extra attention needed to manage pump and/or concerned about the physical sight of the pump. Other children sometimes take a temporary 'pump holiday' and then recommence pump use.

Dr Davis concludes: "This is the largest study of insulin pump use in children. It also has the longest follow up period of any study of insulin pump therapy in children. Our data confirm that insulin pump therapy provides an improvement in glycaemic control which is sustained for at least seven years... Children and adolescents with poor control had the greatest reduction in HbA1c with insulin pump therapy...Although this is not a randomised trial, it is 'real life' experience in a large population based sample over a prolonged time period and as such provides important information."

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Major study links aging gene to blood cancer

2013-08-19
A gene that helps control the ageing process by acting as a cell's internal clock has been linked to cancer by a major new study. Scientists at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, found a genetic variant that influences the ageing process among four new variants they linked to myeloma – one of the most common types of blood cancer. The study more than doubles the number of genetic variants linked to myeloma, bringing the total number to seven, and sheds important new light on the genetic causes of the disease. The research, published in the prestigious journal ...

Dialing back treg cell function boosts the body's cancer-fighting immune activity

2013-08-19
By carefully adjusting the function of crucial immune cells, scientists may have developed a completely new type of cancer immunotherapy—harnessing the body's immune system to attack tumors. To accomplish this, they had to thread a needle in immune function, shrinking tumors without triggering unwanted autoimmune responses. The new research, performed in animals, is not ready for clinical use in humans. However, the approach, making use of a key protein to control immune function, lends itself to further study using candidate drugs that employ the same mechanisms. "This ...

New MR analysis technique reveals brain tumor response to anti-angiogenesis therapy

2013-08-19
A new way of analyzing data acquired in MR imaging appears to be able to identify whether or not tumors are responding to anti-angiogenesis therapy, information that can help physicians determine the most appropriate treatments and discontinue ones that are ineffective. In their report receiving online publication in Nature Medicine, investigators from the Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), describe how their technique, called vessel architectural imaging (VAI), was able to identify changes in brain tumor blood vessels within ...

Marathon bombing victims aided by rapid response, imaging of injuries

2013-08-19
The Boston Marathon bombing brought international attention back to the devastating effects of terrorism. There were numerous victims with severe injuries that needed immediate attention. A novel study in Arthritis Care & Research, a journal published by Wiley on behalf of the American College of Rheumatology (ACR), presents cases from Boston-area hospitals where victims were treated, examining the medical response and imaging technologies used to save lives and limbs. On April 15, 2013, at approximately 2:49 p.m. two pressure-cooker bombs exploded one after the other ...

Experts describe ways to eliminate wasteful medical tests and procedures

2013-08-19
Medical organizations are participating in a campaign to help clinicians and patients avoid wasteful and sometimes harmful medical interventions. Recently, experts in pediatric and adult health from diverse geographic locations of the United States and from a mix of academic and non- academic settings shared their experiences, consulted their colleagues, and analyzed numerous studies in the medical literature to determine the top recommendations for improving healthcare value. Following these recommendations, which are outlined in a new study published today in the Journal ...

Giving preschoolers choice increases sharing behavior

2013-08-19
Getting kids to share their toys is a never-ending battle, and compelling them to do so never seems to help. New research suggests that allowing children to make a choice to sacrifice their own toys in order to share with someone else makes them share more in the future. The new findings are published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science. These experiments, conducted by psychological scientists Nadia Chernyak and Tamar Kushnir of Cornell University, suggest that sharing when given a difficult choice leads children to see themselves ...

Effects of Parkinson's-disease mutation reversed in cells

2013-08-17
UC San Francisco scientists working in the lab used a chemical found in an anti-wrinkle cream to prevent the death of nerve cells damaged by mutations that cause an inherited form of Parkinson’s disease. A similar approach might ward off cell death in the brains of people afflicted with Parkinson’s disease, the team suggested in a study reported online in the journal Cell on August 15. The achievement marks a pharmacologic milestone as the first highly specific targeting of a member of an important class of enzymes called kinases to increase rather than to inhibit ...

Calving sand dunes, stress fields in Southern California, and Devonian black shale

2013-08-17
Boulder, Colo., USA – New Geology postings discuss a vanished link between Antarctica and Australia; the West Salton Detachment fault in California, USA; chemical interaction between peridotite and intruding melts in the Northern Apennines, Italy; calving barchan dunes; the nature of black shale in the Late Devonian Appalachian Basin; the August 2008 avulsion belt of the Kosi River, India; reef island formation; and a one-year record of eight quakes within dune deposits of the Navajo Sandstone, Utah, USA. Highlights are provided below. GEOLOGY articles published ahead ...

Equipping a construction helmet with a sensor can detect the onset of carbon monoxide poisoning

2013-08-17
Research calling for the use of a wearable computing system installed in a helmet to protect construction workers from carbon monoxide poisoning, a serious lethal threat in this industry, has garnered the Virginia Tech investigators a Best Paper Award from a prestigious scientific and engineering community. This award will be presented at the August 17-21, 2013 Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) Conference on Automation Science and Engineering. Carbon monoxide poisoning is a significant problem for construction workers in both residential and industrial ...

Calcium plus vitamin D supplementation does not reduce joint symptoms in postmenopausal women

2013-08-16
Philadelphia, PA, August 15, 2013 – A team of investigators systematically analyzed the effect of calcium and vitamin D supplementation on joint symptoms in a rigorous and controlled study of postmenopausal women. They found that supplementation did not reduce the severity of joint symptoms reported by the participants. Their results are published in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. The influence of low calcium and vitamin D deficiency on joint symptoms has been studied with mixed results. Only some observational studies have associated vitamin D ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Diamond continues to shine: new properties discovered in diamond semiconductors

Researchers find the key to Artificial Intelligence’s learning power – an inbuilt, special kind of Occam’s razor

Genetic tweak optimizes drug-making cells by blocking buildup of toxic byproduct

University of Birmingham researchers awarded grant to tackle early-stage heart disease in chronic kidney disease

Researchers harness AI to predict cardiovascular risk from CT scans

Samsung takes top spot in U.S. patents for third year running while TSMC rises into second place; after four-year falloff, grants increase nearly 4%

HKU ecologist highlights critical gaps in global wildlife trade monitoring

Smoking may lead people to earn less

Hiroshima flooding: A case study of well usage and adaptive governance

New survey finds over half of Americans are unaware that bariatric surgery can improve fertility

World’s oldest 3D map discovered

Metabolomics-driven approaches for identifying therapeutic targets in drug discovery

Applications of ultrafast nano-spectroscopy and nano-imaging

Study links PFAS contamination of drinking water to a range of rare cancers

Scientists explain how a compound from sea sponge exerts its biological effects

Why older women are embracing the open road

Shift to less reliable ‘natural’ contraception methods among abortion patients over past 5 years

Tobacco advertising + sponsorship bans linked to 20% lower odds of smoking

Vascular ‘fingerprint’ at the back of the eye can accurately predict stroke risk

Circulation problems in the brain’s seat of memory linked to mild cognitive impairment in older adults

Oregon State receives $11.9 million from Defense Department to enhance health of armed forces

Leading cancer clinician, researcher Dr. Jenny Chang to lead Houston Methodist Academic Institute

Engineering quantum entanglement at the nanoscale

Researchers develop breakthrough one-step flame retardant for cotton textiles

New study identifies how blood vessel dysfunction can worsen chronic disease

Picking the right doctor? AI could help

Travel distance to nearest lung cancer facility differs by racial and ethnic makeup of communities

UTA’s student success strategy earns national acclaim

Wind turbines impair the access of bats to water bodies in agricultural landscapes

UCF biology researchers win awards from NOAA to support critical coastal work

[Press-News.org] Longest and largest study of insulin pumps to treat type 1 diabetes in children shows they control blood sugar more effectively and with fewer complications than injections