Abstract

Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) has the potential to greatly improve diabetes management. The aim of this work is to show a proof-of-concept CGM device which performs minimally invasive and minimally delayed in-situ glucose sensing in the dermal interstitial fluid, combining the advantages of microneedle-based and commercially available CGM systems. The device is based on the integration of an ultra-miniaturized electrochemical sensing probe in the lumen of a single hollow microneedle, separately realized using standard silicon microfabrication methods. By placing the sensing electrodes inside the lumen facing an opening towards the dermal space, real-time measurement purely can be performed relying on molecular diffusion over a short distance. Furthermore, the device relies only on passive capillary lumen filling without the need for complex fluid extraction mechanisms. Importantly, the transdermal portion of the device is 50 times smaller than that of commercial products. This allows access to the dermis and simultaneously reduces tissue trauma, along with being virtually painless during insertion. The three-electrode enzymatic sensor alone was previously proven to have satisfactory sensitivity (1.5 nA/mM), linearity (up to 14 mM), selectivity, and long-term stability (up to 4 days) in-vitro. In this work we combine this sensor technology with microneedles for reliable insertion in forearm skin. In-vivo human tests showed the possibility to correctly and dynamically track glycaemia over time, with approximately 10 min delay with respect to capillary blood control values, in line with the expected physiological lag time. The proposed device can thus reduce discomfort and potentially enable less invasive real-time CGM in diabetic patients.

Highlights

  • Diabetes mellitus affects 400 million people worldwide and involves dangerous oscillations of the glucose levels in the body, caused by the lack of insulin production by the pancreas or by the faulty physiological response to this hormone

  • A volumetric implant reduction of nearly 50 times with respect to state-of-art devices was achieved, making the presented continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) device the smallest in-situ intradermal Continuous glucose monitoring system (CGMS) reported to date

  • We presented the first integrated system designed to perform in-situ minimally invasive continuous glucose monitoring in the dermal region with minimal delay with respect to glycaemia variations

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Summary

Introduction

Diabetes mellitus affects 400 million people worldwide and involves dangerous oscillations of the glucose levels in the body, caused by the lack of insulin production by the pancreas or by the faulty physiological response to this hormone. Glucose monitoring is self-performed by patients using capillary blood extracted via finger pricking, typically two to five times per day. Continuous glucose monitoring systems (CGMS) have been developed in the last two decades. To perform minimally invasive glucose sensing, transdermal electrochemical sensors remain the most common and reliable solution (Bandodkar and Wang 2014; Heller and Feldman 2010; Vashist et al 2011; Wang 2008). Invasiveness and cost are currently the main reasons for the low compliance and adoption of CGMS by diabetic patients.

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