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Apple Watch Nerds Working on Prickless Glucose Monitoring Sensor

Apple Watch Nerds Working on Prickless Glucose Monitoring Sensor | #eHealthPromotion, #SaluteSocial | Scoop.it

Apple has hired a small team of biomedical engineers to work at a nondescript office in Palo Alto, miles from corporate headquarters. They are part of a super secret initiative, initially envisioned by the late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, to develop sensors that can non-invasively and continuously monitor blood sugar levels to better treat diabetes, according to three people familiar with the matter.

 

Such a breakthrough would be a "holy grail" for life sciences. Many life sciences companies have tried and failed, as it's highly challenging to track glucose levels accurately without piercing the skin.

 

The initiative is far enough along that Apple has been conducting feasibility trials at clinical sites across the Bay Area and has hired consultants to help it figure out the regulatory pathways, the people said.

 

… speculation has been flying around since the company snapped up about a dozen biomedical experts from companies like Vital Connect, Masimo Corp, Sano, Medtronic, and C8 Medisensors. Some of these people joined the secretive team dedicated to glucose, sources said, while others are on Apple Watch team.

 

One of the people said that Apple is developing optical sensors, which involves shining a light through the skin to measure indications of glucose. Accurately detecting glucose levels has been such a challenge that one of the top experts in the space, John L. Smith, described it as "the most difficult technical challenge I have encountered in my career." The space is littered with failures, as Smith points out, but that hasn't stopped companies from continuing to attempt to crack this elusive opportunity.

 

To succeed would cost a company "several hundred millions or even a billion dollars," DexCom executive chairman Terrance Gregg previously told Reuters.

 

The breakthrough would be a boon for millions of people with diabetes, spur new medical research and open up a potential market for consumers to track their blood sugar for health and wellness insights. It could turn the Apple Watch into a "must have" rather than a "nice to have" for people who would benefit from an easier way to track their blood sugar.

 

Apple isn't the only technology company eyeing opportunities in the space. Verily, Google's life sciences team, is currently working on a "smart" contact lens to measure blood sugar via the eye (but read “Google’s ‘Smart Lens’ for Glucose Monitoring Not Such a Smart Idea After All!”) and it partnered up with DexCom in 2015 to develop a glucose-sensing device no bigger than a bandage.

 

Further Reading:


Via Pharma Guy
Pharma Guy's curator insight, April 13, 2017 7:33 AM

Non-invasive glucose monitoring devises are being called the holy grail for “treating” diabetes. To be more precise, such a device would be part of treatment that warns patients when their glucose level is too high or too low. Patients will still have to inject themselves with insulin, the dosage of which may perhaps be determined by the device. That, of course, would require FDA approval as a medical device. The TRUE holy grail would be a device that monitors glucose levels AND automatically delivers the proper dose as needed – i.e., an artificial pancreas.

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Rumor: Apple developing Healthbook app for iOS8 | mobihealthnews

Rumor: Apple developing Healthbook app for iOS8 | mobihealthnews | #eHealthPromotion, #SaluteSocial | Scoop.it

According to a report over at 9to5Mac, Apple is developing a health app called Healthbook that will track steps taken, calories burned, and miles walked. The app will also helps users track blood pressure, hydration levels, heart rate, and other blood-related biometrics, including — possible — glucose levels. In addition to the tracking features, Healthbook will also reportedly help users remember to take their medications and may even integrate with the iPhone’s existing, built-in Reminders app.

The report cites sources who describe the app as being modeled after Apple’s Passbook app, which is an app for storing loyalty cards and coupons. Like Passbook, Healthbook would be designed with an interface that resembles a stack of cards — each card representing a different health or fitness data point.

9to5Mac points out that many features and apps are developed for an upcoming iOS launch than the number that actually makes it into the final cut. While Healthbook may be under development at Apple, it still may never find its way to market.

Rumors aside, Apple has been poaching engineering talent and senior employees from digital health companies over the course of the past year. So, it certainly has more than a passing interest in digital health. Most recently, MobiHealthNews broke the news that Apple had hired Michael O’Reilly, the former chief medical officer of Masimo Corporation, which specializes in pulse oximeters. At the very end of 2012 Masimo commercially launched an iPhone-enabled pulse oximeter called the iSpO2.

Over the weekend The New York Times reported a few new scoops on Apple’s mobile health plans and its rumored iWatch project. Apple’s meeting in December with the FDA was focused on the subject of “mobile medical apps”, which is the term the FDA uses for those apps that need to be regulated as medical devices.

“They are either trying to get the lay of the land for regulatory pathways with medical devices and apps and this was an initial meeting, or Apple has been trying to push something through the FDA for a while and they’ve had hangups,” Mark A. McAndrew, a partner with the law firm Taft Stettinius & Hollister, who first noticed the public notice about the Apple-FDA meeting, speculated in an interview with The New York Times.... [read on ]


Via rob halkes
rob halkes's curator insight, February 3, 2014 2:06 PM

Curious where this will bring us..

Richard Baxter's curator insight, February 5, 2014 4:44 AM

Only a matter of time before Apple saw the potentail of health and big data combinations

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Google, Apple, Facebook and Amazon: where do the big four go from here?

Google, Apple, Facebook and Amazon: where do the big four go from here? | #eHealthPromotion, #SaluteSocial | Scoop.it

Search engines, social media and text messages are history. The major 'walled gardens' of the the internet are developing fast, but all of the big four are betting on various visions of the future. Will the next big things be home automation, virtual reality social networking … or something else entirely?


Via jean lievens
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Why Apple could win in the digital health

Why Apple could win in the digital health | #eHealthPromotion, #SaluteSocial | Scoop.it
Amid rumors of an iWatch that would include biosensors and vitals tracking capabilities, I pondered what Apple could bring to the crowded digital health space.

Via Sam Stern
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