Sensors (Oct 2012)

Italian Contributions to the Development of Continuous Glucose Monitoring Sensors for Diabetes Management

  • Claudio Cobelli,
  • Alberto Maran,
  • Chiara Zecchin,
  • Andrea Facchinetti,
  • Mattia Zanon,
  • Giovanni Sparacino

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s121013753
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 10
pp. 13753 – 13780

Abstract

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Monitoring glucose concentration in the blood is essential in the therapy of diabetes, a pathology which affects about 350 million people around the World (three million in Italy), causes more than four million deaths per year and consumes a significant portion of the budget of national health systems (10% in Italy). In the last 15 years, several sensors with different degree of invasiveness have been proposed to monitor glycemia in a quasi-continuous way (up to 1 sample/min rate) for relatively long intervals (up to 7 consecutive days). These continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) sensors have opened new scenarios to assess, off-line, the effectiveness of individual patient therapeutic plans from the retrospective analysis of glucose time-series, but have also stimulated the development of innovative on-line applications, such as hypo/hyper-glycemia alert systems and artificial pancreas closed-loop control algorithms. In this review, we illustrate some significant Italian contributions, both from industry and academia, to the growth of the CGM sensors research area. In particular, technological, algorithmic and clinical developments performed in Italy will be discussed and put in relation with the advances obtained in the field in the wider international research community.

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