Posted By: technopediasite
Diabetics are benefiting
from an explosion in technology and innovation, from under-the-skin sensors
that eliminate the need for painful finger pricks, to smartphone alerts when
glucose levels rise too high.
Diabetes treatment has
evolved since Mary Fortune was diagnosed in 1967 and hospitalized because there
was no reliable way monitor her blood sugar. These days, a glucose skin patch
transmits her levels day and night to her iPhone and shares the data with
others. Fortune and other diabetics are benefiting from an explosion in
technology and innovation, from under-the-skin sensors that eliminate the need
for painful finger pricks, to smartphone alerts when glucose levels rise too
high. But the technology, and its integration with mobile devices, has brought
the types of lawsuits typically seen by Silicon Valley companies.
For glucose monitors alone,
the number of published patent applications has grown steadily for a decade and
has accelerated significantly since 2015, according to an analysis by the
research firm Patinformatics. More than 880 patent applications related to
glucose monitoring have been published so far this year, said Tony Trippe,
managing director of the Dublin, Ohio-based company.
“Everybody in the market is
realizing there’s an enormous opportunity there,” said Paul Desormeaux, a
senior analyst with Toronto-based Decision Resources Group. “Other players are
starting to come in, and there’s a lot of competition to make advanced
products.”
The boom is driven by a
variety of factors, Desormeaux said. The number of people with diabetes in the
US is rising, the Centers for Disease Control estimates more than 100 million
Americans are now living with diabetes or prediabetes. Insurance coverage for
new devices has increased, and there’s a growing number of partnerships between
health companies and traditional technology firms such as Alphabet Inc.’s
Google, International Business Machines Corp, and Fitbit Inc.
Abbott Laboratories, Roche
Holding AG, DexCom Inc. and Medtronic Plc are the top owners of patents, with
San Diego-based medical device company DexCom having shown the highest rate of
growth since 2015, Trippe said.
Desormeaux is projecting the
market for continuous glucose monitors like those used by Fortune to reach $2
billion in 2026, up from $670 million in 2017. That figure doesn’t include
devices like insulin pumps, smartphone applications, more traditional products
like one-time blood tests, or projections for new products like an artificial
pancreas.
“We have so many choices
that are more innovative now, than what we had when I was diagnosed,” said
Fortune, now executive vice president of the Diabetes Foundation of
Mississippi. “With the latest technology, it is much easier to manage and it is
only getting better.”
The need for new devices
isn’t limited to the U.S., either. China has the most diabetics in the world
and is considered a valuable emerging market, according to Bloomberg
Intelligence analysts Cinney Zhang and Jamie Maarten.
With the financial stakes
rising, so has the number of legal disputes among companies seeking to increase
their market share for these new treatments over innovations like signal
processing, increased sensitivity of glucose levels, and wireless communications.
DexCom, the market leader in
monitors, is embroiled in litigation with AgaMatrix Inc. in federal court,
before the US Patent and Trademark Office, and at the US International Trade
Commission. DexCom’s also fighting an infringement suit filed by closely held
Arbmetrics LLC over an implantable glucose sensor, while DexCom and Abbott
resolved several patent suits in 2014.
Roche’s diagnostic unit last
year settled a case over patents for sending medical information to
smartphones. A small Texas company called Blue Sky Networks sued Roche over
short-range direct communication between wireless devices. Blue Sky has also
sued Fitbit Inc., Toyota Motor Corp., and Lenovo. Medtronic two years ago
fended off an infringement suit targeted at its CareLink system of diabetes
tracking.
And it’s not just glucose
monitors or disputes over proposed generic versions of diabetes drugs. Sinocare
Inc.’s Polymer Technology Systems has filed patent-infringement complaints
against Acon Laboratories Inc. over blood cholesterol systems and test strips
that can be used in homes or at health fairs for on-the-spot results. Patents
for cholesterol tests are on the rise as well, Trippe said, as part of a trend
of innovation to help people who are part of America’s obesity epidemic.
‘Race is On’
“Any time you see trends
with the population, you’re going to see corporate America respond to that,”
said Kirsten Thomson, a lawyer with McDonnell Boehnen Hulbert & Berghoff
who specializes in medical device patents and trademarks. “The race is on to be
the market leader in this space.”
There’s no cure for diabetes, although the condition can be treated and
controlled. It affects some 30 million Americans, more than 9 per cent of the population,
according to the CDC. Rates of those diagnosed with diabetes rises with age, to
25 per cent of those 65 and older. The disease, in which the body doesn’t
produce or properly use the insulin needed to process sugars, can lead to heart disease, stroke, blindness,
kidney failure, and amputations of the feet and legs.
It’s the seventh leading
cause of death in the US. Another 84 million US adults have prediabetes, a
condition that often leads to type 2 diabetes within five years if untreated.
Being able to monitor the ups and downs of blood sugar levels can help patients
adjust their lifestyles and make informed choices on insulin amounts, said Jake
Leach, senior vice president of research and development at DexCom.
Phone It In
“Parents who used to go to
their child’s school every day after lunch, now they don’t have to go, they can
just watch their children’s glucose on the phone,” Leach said. “It’s changed a
lot of people’s lives.”
Most of today’s devices are
designed to help people with type 1 diabetes, who need daily doses of insulin,
and insulin-dependent type-2 diabetes. As the devices get more sensitive, they
can be used by other type-2 patients or those with prediabetes to learn how
their bodies react to food so they can control it with diet and exercise, Leach
said. Researchers also are looking at using monitors for all patients admitted
to hospital, to identify stress-induced hyperglycemia, or an excess of glucose
in the bloodstream.
“Innovation in the area of
glucose monitoring is clearly stepping into the space of making it less
intrusive, discreet and intuitive to handle,” said Ulrike Engels-Lange, a Roche
spokeswoman.
Most diabetics manage their
conditions on their own, but things like remote coaching and therapy support
help them connect with doctors when needed, she said.
‘Exciting’ Innovation'
“This can contribute to
improved therapy outcomes, motivation and adherence, but also can support
efficiencies for the health-care systems.” Engels-Lange said.
Brenda Rendelman, director
of diabetes education for the Central Ohio Diabetes Association, said the newer
devices and improvements in insulin treatments have transformed the lives of
all people with diabetes. While it’s never a good time to have diabetes, the
fast pace of innovation is exciting, she said.
“People with well-managed
diabetes can and do the most amazing things,” Rendelman said. “The fact is,
diabetes does not kill. It’s the complications that happen when diabetes is not
well-managed, for whatever reason — that’s what kills.”
1 Comments
Diabetic patients are at risk of kidney damage due to high blood sugar levels damaging the small blood vessels in the kidneys. This condition, known as diabetic nephropathy, gradually impairs the kidneys' ability to filter waste and excess fluids from the blood. Over time, it can lead to protein leakage into the urine, high blood pressure, fluid retention, and ultimately, kidney failure. To survive in such a situation kidney transplant surgery or dialysis are recommended by doctors. However, it has now proved that transplanting is more efficient and effective.
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