New diabetes treatments, medications, glucose monitors

New diabetes treatments, medications, glucose monitors


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_Pioneering drugs that remedy once-intractable diseases; clever products that make everyday living easier for people with injury or illness; innovative technologies that provide relief at a


touch of a button — by all measures, 2017 has been a year of astounding health care advancements. Here are some of the ways medical trailblazers and researchers are creating fresh


possibilities for you and your family._ Joanne Conte and her son, Jacob, both use a body computer to manage their insulin. Photograph by Brian Doben; wardrobe stylist: Ellen Silverstein;


groomer: Dominic Santiago/Robert Moulton. Portrait producer: Nancy Doben BODY COMPUTER MANAGES INSULIN AUTOMATICALLY Joanne Conte has long suffered the same challenges as the other 1.25


million Americans with type 1 diabetes. In the past she has monitored her glucose levels by pricking her finger to draw blood or checking a dipstick to test her urine. She has used tools


from syringes to pumps to give her body insulin. “I consider myself a historian when it comes to diabetes treatments,” the 51-year-old Meriden, Conn., woman says. Then Conte became an early


tester of the Medtronic MiniMed hybrid closed-loop system, a sort of artificial pancreas that got approval from the Food and Drug Administration in 2016. Worn externally, it communicates


with a sensor on the abdomen, administering basal insulin via a pump. Her son, Jacob, also uses the device. “It’s not a set-it-and-forget-it device,” says Stuart Alan Weinzimer, Conte’s


doctor at Yale New Haven Hospital. “But the overall quality of life improvement is still tremendous.” Notes Conte: “I can spend long days on my feet without constantly worrying.” _—Lexi


Pandell_ A DRUG FOR TWO AILMENTS A new medication can help diabetes patients who also suffer from cardiovascular disease. Empagliflozin cuts the risk of dying from heart attack, stroke or


heart failure by 38 percent for people with both cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes. This past December the FDA approved the drug — marketed as Jardiance by Boehringer Ingelheim,


which manufactures it along with Eli Lilly. —_Mindy Fetterman_ REMIE GEOFFROI A TINY GLUCOSE MONITOR Although it doesn’t administer insulin like the MiniMed, a miniature device allows


patients to monitor glucose levels without the pain of finger pricks. Currently in its fifth generation, the Dexcom G5 continuous glucose monitor takes a reading every five minutes via a


flexible Bluetooth-enabled sensor, the diameter of two human hairs, embedded in the skin. The device can connect to a smartphone app for readings. —_Denny Watkins_ Medicare recipients will


be eligible for the Diabetes Prevention Program, a lifestyle program that research has shown can reduce the progression of diabetes by about 58 percent. _William T. Cefalu, M.D._ EXCITING


DEVELOPMENTS AHEAD  William T. Cefalu, M.D., chief scientific, medical and mission officer at the American Diabetes Association, tells AARP that starting in 2018, Medicare recipients will be


eligible for the Diabetes Prevention Program, a lifestyle program that research has shown can reduce the progression of diabetes by about 58 percent. "Research suggests that maybe the


pancreatic beta cells are not failing (in type 2 diabetes) but are dysfunctional, and there may be a way to have them start functioning again," Cefalu said. —_Selene Yeager_