Current insulin infusion sets are approved for only 2-3 days. The novel ConvaTec infusion set with Lantern technology is designed to extend infusion set wear time.The goal of this pilot study was to evaluate the duration of wear for this set. This was a pilot safety study in adults with type 1 diabetes using tethered insulin pumps. Participants inserted the set and wore it for 10 days or until failure. Among 24 participants, two were excluded. Forty-five per cent of the sets lasted 10 days. Median wear time was 9.1 (7.1, 10.0) days. Among 12 premature failures, six (50%) involved adhesive failures, four (33%) hyperglycaemia unresponsive to correction, one (8%) hyperglycaemia with ketones and one (8%) infection. Average CGM glucose per day of infusion set wear showed a statistically significant increase over time, while total daily insulin over the same period did not change. In this pilot study, the duration of wear for the novel infusion set exceeded previously reported commercial sets (P < .001). This extended wear technology may eventually allow for a combined glucose sensor and infusion set.CSII, insulin pump therapy, insulin therapy, type 1 diabetes
| INTRODUCTIONThe weak link in insulin pump and closed-loop therapy is the insulin infusion set that is inserted under the skin. There is limited information on the interaction between the infusion set, subcutaneous tissue and insulin. The infusion set can become occluded or kinked, and local inflammation and infection around the site can result in insufficient insulin delivery, high glucose levels, ketoacidosis and death. 1,2 There are few studies [3][4][5][6][7] published on the extended use of infusion sets beyond 3 days, although investigation is in progress by Capillary Biomedical (NCT04398030) and Medtronic (NCT04113694). Past studies have tested infusion sets for up to 7 days: Patel et al. reported a median wear time of 6.06 (4.35, 6.98) days, 5 Karlin et al. a least squares mean wear time of 4.12-4.31 days, 6 and Waldenmaier et al. a mean wear time of 6.2 ± 1.5 days. 7 The study conducted by Patel et al. established failure criteria for infusion sets and was a randomized, open-label, crossover study of 20 subjects who wore Teflon catheter (Quick-Set) and steel catheter (Sure-T) infusions set for up to 1 week with no difference in the survival curves of the infusion sets.Length of wear of any infusion set was subject specific, and 30% of failures were secondary to uncorrectable hyperglycaemia, indicating partial catheter occlusion or limitations on insulin absorption in the subcutaneous space. 5 The Karlin study was a multicentre, crossover trial that showed no difference in infusion set survival or mean glucose in 20 individuals with type 1 diabetes wearing the sets in lipohypertrophied and non-lipohypertrophied tissue.Our hypothesis was that the ConvaTec infusion set with Lantern technology, a novel infusion set (Figure 1) with additional slitted