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Podcast Episodes

The Juicebox Podcast is from the writer of the popular diabetes parenting blog Arden's Day and the award winning parenting memoir, 'Life Is Short, Laundry Is Eternal: Confessions of a Stay-At-Home Dad'. Hosted by Scott Benner, the show features intimate conversations of living and parenting with type I diabetes.

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#937 Fastidious

Scott Benner

Jason has type 1 diabetes and uses T-Slim.

You can always listen to the Juicebox Podcast here but the cool kids use: Apple Podcasts/iOS - Spotify - Amazon MusicGoogle Play/Android - iHeart Radio -  Radio PublicAmazon Alexa or wherever they get audio.

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DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.

Scott Benner 0:00
Hello friends, and welcome to episode 937 of the Juicebox Podcast

Jason has type one diabetes, he's an adult, he's having great success on control IQ but he doesn't really completely understand why you go over his settings have conversations. He eventually sent me a note where I'm going to don't forget to read his note into the end and he switched on the pod five and I was having a great time. Boom, boom, what are we going to call this one? Is very amenable. Festivus call it Festivus. While you're wondering why I'm calling it that, please remember that nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice, medical or otherwise, always consult a physician before making any changes to your health care plan. We're becoming bold with insulin, save 35% off the most comfy sheets towels and sportswear I guess like joggers and stuff like that. Yeah, that I've ever worn. Cozy earth.com Go there, load up your cart, put in the offer code juice box at checkout and you'll save 35% off your entire order

this episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by two devices that my daughter has been using forever. The first one, the Dexcom CGM right now Arden's wearing the Dexcom G seven but you can get the G six two at my link dexcom.com forward slash juice box and orange juice the Omni pod dash right now. But this podcast episode, since it's sponsored by Omni pod, I'm going to tell you that you can get the Omni pod dash or the Omni pod five at Omni pod.com forward slash juice box use the devices that Arden has been using since she was a little tiny kid.

Jason 2:08
Hi, my name is Jason. I'm 46 years old. And I was diagnosed type one, three years

Scott Benner 2:17
ago, three years ago when you were 43. Wow. Any any reason to think you would have diabetes like a parent or someone else in your family has it?

Jason 2:28
I had a great uncle that had it. But other than that, no, no, no diabetes. I've got one of those. on mute. I guess it was unusual. But now it's sounding more normal that it's the same kind of diagnosis that a lot of older people are getting. In April to third 2013 I was diagnosed as type two. I had a one C of 8.1. And I had all the normal symptoms. I was losing weight, I was thirsty was getting up to pee all the time at night, four or five times at night. And I went in and I said oh, you're tight to

Scott Benner 3:11
give you medication from there. What do they do? Yes,

Jason 3:15
they started me on Metformin. And then a month later, my agency was down to 5.4. I had started exercising and eating better. And they took me off Metformin. And then I think three months later, they put me back on Metformin. And somewhere in that six year time span, they added insulin. I was taking over long. I was checking my blood sugar four times a day. And they got me a sliding scale that I still have a copy of I kept of how much insulin we give it meals. And then they put me on Invokana as well.

Scott Benner 3:56
Just you were misdiagnosed as a type two for six years. By a general practitioner.

Jason 4:05
I worked for a city and we have a city clinic. And I went in there. And they were the ones that tested me and the doctor at the clinic actually said you have one of the antibody markers, but you don't have to so you're type two.

Scott Benner 4:24
You work for a city. That's the first time anybody's ever said it that way to me before.

Jason 4:29
Yes, I work for a city. I'm a senior chemist at a wastewater treatment

Scott Benner 4:32
plant. Oh, no kidding. Oh, yeah. Jason, you probably shouldn't have told me that. I have a lot of questions about water trough.

Jason 4:42
I got to hear you say water.

Scott Benner 4:44
Yes, you did. And it's gonna happen again. So let me I'll divert for just one second. The picture we all see online from New York City have a giant ball of fat in the sewer. Is that real? Yes. Okay. All right. So do you You put enzymes in the water to break up the fat? Or how do you handle that?

Jason 5:06
Well, I don't do any of that I work in the lab and they bring us samples and we test them and give them their data. And then they go out and do whatever they do.

Scott Benner 5:17
But do they do? Like, how do you handle something like that? Like, I guess let me re ask the question then based more on your on your perspective. What are you looking for? And why are you looking for it?

Jason 5:34
We're cleaning out the the water that comes through the sewer, so that we can clean it up enough to pump it back into a river.

Scott Benner 5:43
Okay. And what are you taking out of it? Like what what happens when the population uses it that it needs to be cleaned? I know medications I remember reading a story about somewhere near Oh, Wisconsin, or Chicago or something where there was so much Metformin in the water, it was starting to impact wildlife. And that they said was because the population was using so much that it was passing through in their waist. Is that kind of how that works? Oh, yeah. Wow. That's weird. It makes so much sense. And yes, and yet, I don't think anyone would ever consider it. So you need to clean it also good.

Jason 6:25
They also can find COVID and wastewater and track it

Scott Benner 6:29
that way. You can tell how, how much a virus is in a particular place. Is that may I ask Jason, does that come through the Poopoo? Or the PP are both? Both? Both? Interesting. Oh, my goodness. And then we want it it's one of the marvelous things about this country, isn't it? The way we can provide clean drinking water and and usable water for people? It's, it's a marvel of like society, I think, I don't know. Nobody thinks about it here. I wouldn't imagine but this many people, this much the volume of water that must get used? I think it's I think it's marvelous like that it works that way. I imagine it doesn't feel magical to you anymore, but it does. Not so much. You don't you don't feel like you're involved in a, in an amazing process. I do. Just to you know, Jason, between you and I think what you're doing and the people you do it with? It's, it's pretty amazing. So anyway, all right. So you've done this your whole life? Or is this a like, how do you apply a chemistry degree?

Jason 7:39
I've been doing it for 17 years. I originally got it who read environmental science, he just wanted to help the environment and stumbled on this job.

Scott Benner 7:49
Nice. It's, it's I think it's definitely important work that I don't think anybody pays attention to. So I do. I'm constantly amazed by it, just so you know. And I'm very careful. Like if I fill up a container to give, you know, my dog's water, and there's a little bit left in it, I will go out of my way to put it in a plant or somewhere like I would never consider going back to the sink and just dumping it out again. I don't know I'm, I'm I don't know why it strikes me that way. I don't know what someone said to me when I was younger, but I don't know. I think it's amazing. Alright, forget all that. They tell you your type your type two for six years, you're living on Metformin, eventually, obviously, you're not type two, so they have to start adding insulin. How do you and then you have a doctor tell you you have a marker for type one, but that still doesn't move it so how do you end up figuring out you are

Jason 8:53
going into the city clinic I can't remember now if I was sick or had an injury, but I went in and he's like, Hey, we haven't done bloodwork in a while. Let's do let's take let's take some blood work and see how you're doing. And so when they took my blood work, I was 7.1 Okay, and I was still losing weight. I was down 260 pounds. I think

Scott Benner 9:21
how much weight had you lost in total?

Jason 9:25
Over the six years I'm five nine I think I went from around 200 to 160

Scott Benner 9:32
do you think 160 Is the correct weight for your frame or were you too small?

Jason 9:38
Oh my wife is telling me obviously skinny Okay.

Scott Benner 9:41
When she just might be a chubby chaser Jason I don't know about health wise not your wife proclivities, you know, I'm saying but, but you felt undersized. Okay. So so you're you're wasting away but slowly and you're using enough insulin I guess to Do you think it's Lada? Do you think it was a slow onset? Or do you think you were like full on type one, and you were just using enough insulin to help yourself?

Jason 10:10
I asked my CDE back in June. And she said, You know, I don't really know. But it doesn't really matter. You hear type one now and you need insulin now. So

Scott Benner 10:22
your CD was your CD was deflecting Jason

Jason 10:27
actually didn't know all that whole backstory. So he wasn't involved in that.

Scott Benner 10:32
It reminds me of when Cole was born, and he came out and the doctor held him and I was going to cut the umbilical cord, and there was a knot tied into the umbilical cord, like tight. And I pointed to the knot, and I said, Is this a problem? And he held call up an extra inch and went, apparently not. And then I. And I was like, that's not a real answer to my question. So anyway. Okay. So once you figure out your type one, how does management switch?

Jason 11:06
I started to go see an endo. I saw an endo. And I guess November and I walked out with the libre. And I went back. Well, I mean, obviously, they put me on long lasting and short acting, MDI, okay, and they said, come back in January, I came back. And they're like, You should start thinking about getting a pump. Is that something you think you want to do? And I said, Well, I've never really thought about it. And I said, Sure, why not? Let's get a pump. And I started pumping in February of 2020.

Scott Benner 11:46
Okay, so can you tell me a little bit from a psychological perspective? What was it like to go into that office thinking you had type two diabetes, and probably being like, you know, the way people think about type two all the time, it's like, you know, lose weight, it'll get better. And you've lost a significant amount of weight to the point where you think there's something wrong with that. And it hasn't made an impact on it. So you have this thing you believe you're doing the things they tell you, it's getting worse, not better. And then someone just does the Presto change along you and tells you that no, it's not this. It's that. Is that hard to swallow? Or were you able to just roll with it?

Jason 12:27
I mean, I've never looked into type one. I didn't know a lot about it. I didn't know anything about it. It was kind of a shock. And what's funny is the the doctor was like, Oh, this is good news. You have the good diabetes now. And I'm like, that doesn't sound right. How can I don't think anyone can be

Scott Benner 12:47
good. Exactly. There's not a good version. Yeah.

Jason 12:57
I told my dad that on the way home, I talked to him on the phone and he's a doctor. He's like, No, that iPhone is not the good version.

Scott Benner 13:03
Did your dad say? You got the bad kind of a doctor?

Jason 13:10
I'm sure he was thinking that.

Scott Benner 13:11
What kind of physician is your father? He's an OB, Jin. Oh, okay. No kidding.

Jason 13:19
Yeah, he was a originally he was a naval doctor. And

Scott Benner 13:24
then he moved down to the Medina. Thank you,

Jason 13:29
man. Thank you, man.

Scott Benner 13:32
Jason, I gotta tell you something. We can stop now. If you want. He moved from the navel to the vagina. Um, good. I don't think it's gonna get better than that. You know what I mean? Man, I was really proud of that. Just uh, you're all aware. Yeah. I'm sorry, crack myself up. Okay, so. So you, you leave for the libre, you go to MDI. I love how they asked you. Do you think you want to pump as if you have any idea what any of that means? Or, you know, like, why not? You don't I mean, man, like, why wouldn't somebody say to you, hey, an insulin pumps an option. Here are some benefits of an insulin pump. What do you think about what I've just said, instead of going, Hey, you want an insulin pump? I know you don't know what it is or what it does or any reason why you would want it but it's now on you to decide. But you went with the idea. Right? Once you did go with the idea you decided to do it. Yeah,

Jason 14:35
sure. Let's let's try it out. I mean,

Scott Benner 14:38
Jason, you're incredibly easy to get along with why is that? A part of the country? You're from? Texas. Like northern southern east west.

Jason 14:49
I grew up in South Texas, but now I'm in Dallas.

Scott Benner 14:52
Okay. You just you're very amenable through the story with with not with me. You're very difficult with majors but no, no, I'm just kidding. You're very, you're very amenable, like in the conversation with the physician. And even earlier before when people aren't going to hear that we had some trouble technically getting set up, you. You err on the side of like contrition during the thing, even though you weren't doing anything wrong. So it's interesting. But so you start pumping, how long does it take for you? Or did you ever get things under control?

Jason 15:28
The interesting thing was I was the first patient in the office to start control like you.

Scott Benner 15:33
Really? How long ago?

Jason 15:37
2020 Right before COVID I snuck in an appointment before COVID started looking

Scott Benner 15:41
to really hit. And is that is control like you the thing that brought things around for you like how were you doing prior to that?

Jason 15:53
You mean, between my diagnosis and

Scott Benner 15:55
then? Well, between the time somebody hands you needles and said you have type one. And when you got a pump? How long was that time?

Jason 16:04
That was from that state, November 1 to February 12. I went from a 7.1

Scott Benner 16:16
to a six, just on MDI and then you move to a pump very soon after a few months after I gotcha. Okay, did the pump then make another I would imagine another adjustment to your outcomes.

Jason 16:32
I stayed. On January, I was six. April, I was 6.3. And then, in August, I was 4.8. I remember I was sitting on the field watching my kids practice soccer. And I was looking at Facebook and I was in a diabetes

group. Someone's mentioned that Juicebox Podcast, and I was like, Well, I'm almost done with the podcast and listen to I don't have anything else to listen to well get the juice box and try and see what that's about.

Scott Benner 17:12
And now you realize you'll never get done with this because I make too much content you'll you won't be able to finish.

Jason 17:18
You keep me entertained at work.

Scott Benner 17:20
I'm doing my best. Oh, am I helping to support the cleaning of water? This makes me feel very good. Yeah, of course you are. How do you listen? The liquid that you drink that comes out of the faucet? What do you call it? Water water. When I say it like that? Am I saying what you're saying water? Does that sound like though? See, it's hard to tell, isn't it? So when I say Yeah, I hear you say water. Are you hearing me say it correctly when I do that? Say it again? Water. That's normal. Okay, and when I say water, you hear like WT t er. Yeah, gotcha. Hey, when you're watching your son play soccer. Are you thinking I wish this kid was playing football or baseball? Be honest with Jason.

Jason 18:14
I'm not I don't want him to get a head injury. And I find baseball born.

Scott Benner 18:19
That soccer ball could hurt though. You get that worked in your head. It's not good. I'm telling you. Maybe field hockey. That's for girls. Even that. Even that balls hard badminton? Nobody's getting hurt. And badminton. I bet.

Jason 18:32
Well, now he's switched over to taekwondo. So

Scott Benner 18:34
oh, oh, that's interesting. Good for him. All right. So you found the podcast? did? I mean, listen, I want to try to take, I'm gonna take credit for your 4.8 and one see if I can. But if I can't, like, how are you accomplishing that?

Jason 18:52
Before listening to your podcast, nobody had ever mentioned Pre-Bolus. That's just check your blood sugar. Give your insulin and start eating.

Scott Benner 19:03
What are you eating? Jason? What's your diet?

Jason 19:08
I eat just a normal American diet. No restrictions.

Scott Benner 19:13
Get out of here. So you're using you're using a fast acting insulin in a pump. You have a CGM. You're using control IQ. So you must have moved from libre to Dexcom. At some point, is that right? Yes. Okay, so you have a Dexcom G six, you have control IQ. You'll learn how to Pre-Bolus and you have a sub five a one C and describe to me what an American diet is to you like what are a handful of things you've eaten this week?

Jason 19:39
Let's see. Well, last night was just grilled chicken corn on the cob and a salad but the night before I made pizza. We've had tacos as we spaghetti. We do a lot of grilling and smoking. Because we're in Texas. That's what we do. There's

Scott Benner 20:01
no drawing with your with your smoking. Those aren't wet rubs in Texas. They're dry rubs, right? Yeah. Right. But you're, you're taking in carbs? Do you avoid processed foods completely?

Jason 20:19
Um, I don't eat a whole lot of processed foods. I'll eat chips. But I say no restrictions, but I don't really have a sweet tooth. I don't eat like cookies or candy or cakes. Okay. But I didn't stop my want to eat, I'll eat it. Chinese food.

Scott Benner 20:41
How many carbs do you think you take in a day?

Jason 20:46
Hmm. It's hard to say because I kind of quit counting carbs. I kind of do like you. I just looked at the plate. And I'm like, Well, that's about 10 units of insulin.

Scott Benner 20:59
Wow. Why are you so good at this? Maybe? Jason, maybe you do have the good kind of diabetes. But No, but seriously, why do you think you're doing? Like, I mean, I guess I should ask first. Are you having a lot of lows? No, no, you don't have hours at a time where you're 65? You don't do something about it? Nothing like that? No,

Jason 21:25
no, I actually actually looked at my clarity report before coming on here is no that the endo wants the range set at 70 to 180. So that's what I declared. He said I was 94% in range with like, 2% low. And point 2% very low.

Scott Benner 21:45
what's your what's your What was your percentage High and High means over 180 In this scenario, but

Jason 21:51
let me see if I can pull that up. Would you because I'm

Scott Benner 21:53
fascinated.

Jason 21:54
High as 2.7% Very high 0.2.

Scott Benner 22:00
Holy hell. What? Huh?

Jason 22:04
My average glucose is 109. power efficient 25.7. Standard deviation play

Scott Benner 22:12
your deviations pretty good. And everything's good. Alright, so, Jason, I mean, you're three years at this. Can you contextualize for me why you're having the outcomes you're having?

Jason 22:27
I think I just pay proactive on it. If I'm gonna eat a high carb meal, I'll change my Basal rate. I'll double it from point seven, five 1.5. And I'll leave it there for till it peaks and starts coming down. You know, and I just make corrections. If I get over. My alarm is set for 140. So if I hear it, I start looking. Do I need to make an adjustment to why did I miss on my basil? Am I going to need more? You ever had to stay on top of

Scott Benner 23:05
it? Yeah, that's what I was gonna say you're you're ahead of it. And if it tries to get ahead of you, you jump on top of it. Push it back again. That's it. Yep. You know, Well, I'm glad about that. But you know, not everyone listens to Jason, which is why you're freaking me out a little bit. So, in a very good way. Don't get me wrong. You're not a Cowboys fan. Sorry. Yes, we are. I don't know how we

Jason 23:30
were more college fans. Oh, perfect.

Scott Benner 23:33
Let's not mention the Cowboys. Okay. I've learned growing up in Philadelphia, that Eagles fans believe that the Cowboys are their bitter rival but the Cowboys don't feel that way about the Eagles sack true.

Jason 23:53
No, I think. I don't know. Like I said I'm not the hugest Cowboy fan.

I know we don't like the Eagles. We think our people down here think the Eagles fans are awful.

Scott Benner 24:05
I'm an Eagles fan. Jason, what do you think? Wow. You being awful. Thank you. It's perfect. Although, let me tell you a story that might change your mind. Then we're gonna go back to your your management

I just got nervous because I forget what story I told to highlight. Anyway. I guess we'll find out together in a second. But first, Omni pod.com forward slash juicebox at my link, you can get the Omni pod dash or the Omni pod five. Now, all the AMI pods are tubeless they're all delightful. They're all just that little thing you just put on no tubing, nothing to be tethered to no reason why you can't just jump like in the lake or in a pool or your tub. Right? You don't have to take it off first. Anyway That's maybe just the tiniest little bit of why we love the AMI pod in our house. But here's the thing, there's two Omni pods, you can get the dash. If you just want to make all the decisions yourself, like put in your settings, then you know, you're like, Well, I'm gonna put in this many carbs and you know, my blood sugar is going up, I'll make an adjustment that's going down and make an adjustment. But if you get the AMI pod five, when it's coupled with a Dexcom, G six, you have an algorithm that's making insulin decisions for you. Yes, you still tell it, I'm gonna have this many carbs. But then man, it starts making decisions by itself. It's pretty amazing. Omni pod.com forward slash juicebox. It's at least worth you checking out use the links, please, it helps support the podcast, you can type them in a browser or click on them in the show notes of your podcast player or at juicebox podcast.com. As long as you get the my link, you're supporting the show, whether you're interested in Omni pod, are ready to buy Omni pod.com forward slash juice box. Now another link to please just treat exactly the same dexcom.com forward slash juice box Dexcom, G six and Dexcom G seven both available there. Arden is rockin the g7. Right now she loves it. But she wore the G six for years. And it was fantastic. So whatever you're looking for, whether it's a G six, or the G seven, head to dexcom.com, forward slash juicebox. To check it out, you're going to be able to see your blood sugar in real time. Its speed and direction. That's like, is it going up? Is it going down? Is it going up? Three points a minute, two points a minute. Is it 98? Next time it takes a reading? Is it 110? Is it 70 It shows you right on your smartphone, Android or iPhone or on the Dexcom receiver. I don't want to call it magical because I think I'm not allowed to. But it's amazing. And I love it. And if you came to my house and tried to take it, I'd get a stick and beat you back out the door. dexcom.com forward slash juice box you can't have origins Dexcom you can't ever Omni pod. But you can get your own use the links support the show. That was slick when I was like he can't have hers. Like I set that whole thing up. Like can't come to my house and take my daughter's stuff, but you could get it. Anyway, I was pretty impressed with myself as I do those things on the fly and don't pre write them. Support the podcast, please, by supporting the sponsors. I'm not saying go by Dexcom if you don't want one, but if you're gonna get one, please use my legs. Thank you so much. Let's get back to Jason and whatever horrible story I'm about to tell.

I grew up being taught to like, yell and scream at sporting events, right? I'm not I'm not a big yeller and screamer anymore. And I can look back in hindsight and see that I don't that, you know, athletes are not people who you get to yell at just because they're, you know, being paid to play a game in front of you. However, when I was much younger, I don't know exactly how young, my early 20s Maybe we were at a Phillies game and a visiting team. I think it was the Cardinals and I want to say that the guy was Lance Berkman, but hold on. And let me check. And anyway, this guy was playing left field. Was it Lance Berkman? Yeah, I think it was. I apologize the LANSON in advance if he ever hears this. I don't imagine he will. He had recently lost a lot of weight and in honesty look terrific. He's coming out of left field. We're at the Phillies game. And so he's coming down the third base line, I'm sitting on a third baseline. And, you know, sometimes at a sporting event for reasons that you can't figure out like just all the sound dies, like nobody makes noise for a minute. So it's dead silent. And I yell Lance, Lance, and he looks up. And I said, You look better fat. And he I don't know why I said that. Again, I was the young man. And he like he looked up. I feel bad telling the story. He looked up like, oh, look, somebody's calling my name. I will wave and as he was getting ready to gesture, I said what I said and his hands in his head just went forward and he just slumped down into the dugout, and then an entire section of the stadium burst out into laughter as if the best thing that ever happened just happened. And I in the moment, was incredibly proud of myself. And now 30 years later, or however long ago it was now actually I might be dating myself. I have no idea when it was it was the end of his career, I believe. I feel I feel badly for doing that. So our Phillies and Eagle those fans bad people. All I can tell you for sure is that 300 People thought that Lance Berkman story was hilarious. So, maybe we are. So anyway, Jason, I, here's what I'll tell you about Philly. If you're walking down the street in Philadelphia, when I was growing up, and you tripped and you fell, everyone would laugh at you. And then they would all make sure you're okay and help you. That's, that's how I think of Philadelphia. Like, you're not gonna get out, you're not gonna get away with anything, but no one's gonna leave you behind. So, there's something about sarcasm, and picking it people you love that seems intrinsic to this area. I don't know why that is. Anyway, Landsberg was a perfectly fine guy. And I don't, I'm sure I was happy for his health changes. I just thought of the first bizarre, hurtful thing that I could think of and blurting it out loud. And I couldn't begin to tell you why. Anyway, all right. What do you think Jason in my bag? I know. You think Landsberg would like me?

Jason 31:12
I think if he heard the story, if he remembered it, he might think it's funny now looking back, but

Scott Benner 31:18
I don't know. Jason, I have to tell you if he remembers that. It would be one of the proudest things I've ever accomplished. I would go places and tell people anyway. So you're you said I said it's such a strange turn. But okay, so you're using insulin? You're on this control like you. Are you consistently under five or was that just a fluke?

Jason 31:44
I looking back, five is the highest I've ever been. In August, I was five. But we went on three vacations this summer. And I had COVID like two weeks before that appointment. So

Scott Benner 32:02
Jason, this is a verified agency from a lab or this is like your app telling you this?

Jason 32:07
No, this is from the CDE I've I've kept all those little stickers they print out when they do a want to see

Scott Benner 32:12
wow and in for for your money. This is about understanding the timing of insulin and staying ahead of arise and nothing else. Yeah. Are you are you maniacal about it like you would never let a high blood sugar go.

Jason 32:38
I don't I don't know if I'd say maniacal but you know if it gets the 180 I'm pretty mad.

Scott Benner 32:44
I wasn't proud of the word when I pulled it. Jason just so you know, I think my my internal thesaurus let me down. I was I think I was gonna say Festivus. And then I thought that's not a word people use.

Jason 32:58
I was picturing someone staring at their just looking at it like with mean eyes like, I'm going to do something.

Scott Benner 33:08
Well, I think I meant half of that. But not the mean part. Just the just just the intensity of not letting it go. You know, fastidious was the right word. I shouldn't have been embarrassed that. I knew that word. I should have just one word. Yeah. Okay. Weird spelling by the way. But great word. FAS T ID IO us. fastidious, it's a great word means showing or demanding excessive delicacy or care. I'm not I'm not embarrassed by my. But I actually I dumbed myself down just then Jason. I don't usually do that. Why did I do that? Is it because you're from Texas? I'll figure it out. As I don't want to be using fancy words when we're talking about Texas and barbecue and yelling Atlanta. Fancy words to hey, how bizarre is it that I'm the guy who yelled you looked better fat at Lance Berkman. But I thought I knew and use Sidious. And I'm a paradox, Jason. We're not going to people know what paradox is right? I don't have to define that. We're good. So we got that. Yeah. So what made you want to come on the podcast?

Jason 34:29
I guess just to share my story. I don't know. I think every podcast has got something valuable. And then I thought maybe I could add something to it. My goal was to come on if I was diabetic for a year, but then I waited around and then wants to do schedule it. It's pushed out so far.

Scott Benner 34:53
I'm amazed every day when there's somebody on the line when I push the button, Jason. I'm like this person signed up to do this six months ago. I had a lady sign up the other day. It's September 2022. Right now. And I got an email that said that this person just chose August 23 2023 as their recording date. Wow. Almost a year. Yeah. And I was like, Huh. And then I'll record with them. And I'll put, it'll take me six months to put up. But I tell that story because it makes the, it makes the advertisers very comfortable because they know there's content. So you were going to do it under after a year, then you sat on the idea for a little bit. And then by the time you did it, it takes as long as it does to get on. Do you think you've learned anything in that time? Like, how much different? Are you as a person with diabetes right now than you would have been two years ago, for example?

Jason 35:49
I think I've gotten better at, you know, taking out doses for meals for sure. Like, you know, he kind of eat the same things over and over again. And you can look at it and say, well, six units wasn't enough last time. Let's try seven or seven was too much last time. Let's try backing it down a little bit and see what happens.

Scott Benner 36:11
Are you incredibly active? No,

Jason 36:15
no, I think my activities probably aren't working. That's about it.

Scott Benner 36:19
No kidding. Did you put a bunch of did you put much of that weight on after you were diagnosed? correctly? Put it back I've come back to

Jason 36:27

  1. And I'm just kind of hovering right at 180.

Scott Benner 36:31
So you're probably in a very healthy weight right now for your size. In your mind. Yeah. Your wife happy again?

Jason 36:37
Probably I could. I could probably lose five or 10 pounds but okay.

Scott Benner 36:41
Is your wife happy again? I know she wants something to grab onto. Yeah, she's happy I'm still here. Is that how you measure your marriage whether or not she makes you leave? That's how I measure my Jason That's why I was asking. Oh my god. I don't I'm amused by the idea of your wife being like once you put some weight back on, get that thing shaken for me again. But I'm also used by the idea of saying it to you because it seems so out of character for you. That I feel like it makes you uncomfortable. I think my Lance Berkman things coming back Jason off the stop that. So okay, so you're back at a good weight. There's nothing Jason I can't tell you like this is crazy. Like, you don't have you're not incredibly active. You're You're swagging your meals by going I think it's about this much insulin, you are eating repetitively. So you're learning and getting better and better and better. I mean, you're past the age where I imagine you'd be having any weird hormonal shifts. So you're not seeing an impact there. You're not a woman, you're not having a menstrual cycle, like nothing like that's happening. It almost feels like this is as easy for you as someone could hope for.

Jason 38:09
Yeah, I, you know, I feel bad for the kids who have it and who go through puberty and their fight and all those changes. You know, that seems like it's a lot rougher. And for me it just kinda it's just another thing to do during the day.

Scott Benner 38:27
Yeah, it's really it's super interesting. So what about like, I don't know Are you do you take any supplements do you? Like I'm trying to figure out something you might be doing that other people aren't doing that we wouldn't maybe initially attached to this.

Jason 38:43
Now I don't think any other medicine except insulin.

Scott Benner 38:46
No kidding. I don't know what to say even you what's your what's your like lineage? What's your background? Western European mud. That's got it. English, Irish, Swedish. English Honors. So you even have a blend of European and you that's, that leans towards people who I see it. How about other autoimmune is there? Do you have any other autoimmune issues? Do your kids your family members?

Jason 39:20
No. Not as not as far as I know. No one's ever said anything about thyroid or celiac Hashimoto, or just in your ear bipolar.

Scott Benner 39:31
You're a unicorn Jason. Very interesting. How many you have kids? How many kids?

Jason 39:42
I have one kid. He's seven will be eight and December.

Scott Benner 39:45
Are you thinking of more or is one where we're stopping?

Jason 39:50
One and done?

Scott Benner 39:51
I agree with this. Yeah, I mean, you've run the risk of him being like a snotty little brat when he's older but you can knock that out of him and in his early 20s Probably But but but I, oh, smart because also college very expensive. Yeah.

Jason 40:09
We went through a lot of IVF to get the one and

Scott Benner 40:12
Oh, I see we

Jason 40:13
tried a couple times after and then just didn't never take so

Scott Benner 40:18
interesting. So while you were Oh, he seven. So you were trying to have a baby while you had diabetes? Yes. Wasn't what did you ever wonder if that was the cause? Like, were you ever concerned? And did you look into it from your perspective versus hers?

Jason 40:37
Oh, no, it was all her

Scott Benner 40:43
it was very directly like that. I was everything. Sperm perfect. It was. So well. That's tough. So your wife went through a lot then to have your your son? Yes,

Jason 40:55
it was very emotional. Very rough on us on her.

Scott Benner 41:00
Yeah, no, I imagined terrible. I'm sorry that she had to go through that. I'm glad it worked out for you. And I understand why you wouldn't be up for it again. So you, you're your own condom. Basically, Jason, you don't even have to worry about it. You know, it's gonna happen, right? Like, you'll be 52 And she'll come into the room and be like, I'm pregnant. You're gonna be like, no, no, no, no. She'll think that

Jason 41:23
would be well, that would be something else. Yeah,

Scott Benner 41:26
you gotta be careful. Jason. Are you being careful? Oh, that's it. No, I'm gonna take that as a no. Jason. Okay. It's,

Jason 41:38
there's an issue with two stuff. So it's not possible.

Scott Benner 41:42
You really okay. It really It can't happen. All right, right. All right. Listen, if it ever happens, please call me back. Please be like, so Scott. Listen. We went to a wedding. Then after the wedding, we went home, acted like kids for a couple of hours. And I don't know. I don't because if you ever heard of people like I noticed it's not the same thing. But people have had like their Oh, I can't think of the name of vasectomy. I almost said there. I almost said their balls clip. But mastectomy? And then they you'll hear about it like it going back or something? I've

Jason 42:21
I've heard those stories before. Yeah, terrible stories. JSON. They're

Scott Benner 42:25
terrible. Like a horror movie. Seriously? Wow. All right. Well, listen, let's that'd be is there anything you want to talk about that? I don't know to bring up because I'm baffled by you. I don't even I'm not 100% sure where to go with this?

Jason 42:43
Oh, yeah, I was kind of wondering if we wouldn't go anywhere with it. Because I didn't know what how this conversation was gonna go.

Scott Benner 42:50
Thank you. You're flipping me out. So like, it's I mean, I guess Tell me a little bit about, you know what, let me let me dig for a second. So your, your hunt 180 pounds, you're in your you're in your 40s? What's your Basal set?

Jason 43:11
Well, I just, I just listened to your on the pod series. And I heard that your Basal should be 40 to 50%. And I'm using less space on that. But I bumped it to point nine.

Scott Benner 43:24
Well, that's on on the pod five on the pod five, when you're first setting it up is desirous of your basil Bolus being pretty balanced, that it makes the learning process smoother. And I and you know, to dig into that a little more. I think people often get to the right, the right result the wrong way. Meaning maybe their Basal is very low when they're over bolusing food and corrections to stay above it are there Basil is too high, and they're eating to feed the basil like that kind of stuff. And so not that it's some sort of rule that it's 5050. But for reasons that are explained in the on the pod five episodes, which people should feel free to go try. They when you're starting on the pod five, having your settings near 5050 is advantageous. So but where were you at? Tell me I'm sorry, you were at point seven, five now and you moved at 2.9? Did you then change your carb ratio or your correction factor or anything like that? No, I didn't see you got stronger with your Basal but didn't change insulin to carb or your correction factor and you're not getting low? Correct. You're just keeping so where do you sit stable away from food and BOCES?

Jason 44:51
Oh 100 Arlington.

Scott Benner 44:55
Okay. And the point nine is the 100 110 where we Were we sitting prior to that? And were you seeing control IQ was consistently giving you insulin. And now you've made up for that with the Basal

Jason 45:09
control IQ. Yeah, it's taken away my Basal even though I had it set at point seven, five A lot of times it would look like it was point three an hour.

Scott Benner 45:18
Then why did you move at 2.9?

Jason 45:21
I don't know I listened to you.

Scott Benner 45:24
Just like our slides. Just just you might be like, just like dumb luck in this this diabetes thing? Who knows? But,

Jason 45:31
well, I I've gotten no advice from my CDE they don't they don't. They never look at my settings. They never told me to adjust anything. And they're just like, hey, you're doing great. New prescriptions have family. What's going on in your life?

Scott Benner 45:44
How's the family? I heard that kid stop playing soccer. God bless. Soccer cannot be a sport people love in Texas. Am I right?

Jason 45:55
There's a lot of soccer players. I mean, not played for eight years. When I was a kid.

Scott Benner 45:59
Oh, no kidding. Oh, that I'm misinformed. I think of I think of Texas as a place where everybody plays football in high school and everyone lives and dies with that might be because I watched that TV show. Oh God. Now I'm realizing Friday lights, which I did enjoy. I don't think I've ever seen the movie though. That who cares? Alright, so what are you what's your? Alright, so what's your correction, your insulin to carb ratio for meals?

Jason 46:30
Oh, gosh, let me look at even if

my correction is one 254. My carb ratio is one to 10.

Scott Benner 46:48
One to 10. One unit moves, you're 54 points, point nine Basal. All of a sudden? Do you find that to be right? Do you ever go out of automation and try your settings to see if they work? No, I've never done that. Interesting. But you notice that it's taking basil away most of the time? Yeah. Do you eat frequently throughout the day?

Jason 47:21
Just three meals a

Scott Benner 47:22
day, you're a three meal person. So So you Bolus your meal? And is that when you see it take basil away? Or is it taking basil away? Even? Overnight? Or?

Jason 47:36
Yeah, I don't take it away overnight.

Scott Benner 47:43
Because the weight control IQ works, it is it is utilizing the Basal rate that you put in there. So whatever you tell it, it's deciding. I'll take some of this away, I'll leave it where he put it, or I'll add to it. And you were at point seven, and it's taking it away. You made it point nine it's still taking it away. Is there ever any time on your graph where you're actually using the point nine? Yeah, right now, you are right now okay. Because there's part of me that wonders if your Basal like I see you're trying to get lower like stability? I did you consider making the the correction factor stronger, instead of the Basal stronger? Have you ever tried that?

Jason 48:37
No, but now that you've mentioned that, I probably will give that a shot.

Scott Benner 48:41
Again, you're very amenable. And so so let's tell people for real quickly. Nothing in here that Juicebox Podcast should be considered advisement or otherwise, I'm just talking out loud. So like if so did moving your Basal up lower your the place where you said stable or no? It would? I don't think it did. That's what I'm asking

Jason 49:02
now. It's still

Scott Benner 49:05
it's still the 101 10 Yeah, pretty much. So my thought is because you're not spiking it meals, right?

Jason 49:15
Everybody goes up, I go up. I mean, sometimes see. lunch yesterday, I hit 182.

Scott Benner 49:23
Okay, how long for how long until you were back down again? And did you have to correct it yourself?

Jason 49:30
Yeah, I did add some corrections. That was I think that was fat and protein though, because the rise came

Scott Benner 49:37
later again, while later we don't want to count that and I know everybody's blood sugar goes up when they eat but for the most part, it sounds like you're more of a 140 person. Okay, which I'm comfortable with. Not that you care what I think but so. Yeah, I mean, I don't know if I don't put the Basal back to where it was. and try making your sensitivity. Would you say it was one to 54? Like, move it to like, oh, no, I'm just I, you know, where would you move? It's 50

Jason 50:15
I don't know, I've never moved it before. Yeah,

Scott Benner 50:17
I might just move it a couple points and see what happens, like, make it 52. And see, and see if that starts bringing down that, that stability. And if it does, then keep nudging it one at a time, until you get to where you want to be. And pay attention to what the algorithms doing with the Basal like the in a perfect scenario, that you have chosen a Basal amount that the algorithm does not need to frequently take away from or add to that would be an indication that it's well set. And then you're giving the algorithm the ability to be more aggressive by making the the sensitivity stronger. And you know, the lower the number, the stronger the number, right. Yeah, okay, so and then, I mean, I I'd make very small adjustments to that to see what happens. And then if you start and then see if that doesn't also impact your meals. And then if that's amazing, though, Jason like your See, you might be see you can't really over Basal, though, because you have an algorithm. So, so you're where are you? How are you fixing? I think you need less insulin than you think you do. What's your total daily insulin? Can you pull that? I'm gonna get a calculator while you do that. By get a calculator, I mean, I'm going to open up an app on my computer that's a calculator

the lady that left the review the other day that said my interviews don't have enough diabetes in it. She's gonna love this. And also this is for her Jason cover years. There. Okay, now. He just talked to her about being a stripper. It was interesting. Okay. Jason cleans. Wait, hold on water. Water. Jason cleans water, which is I can't say that makes me feel uncomfortable. All right, go get your total daily insulin, making some notes here.

Jason 52:35
Where's that average? It's usually about 3035 a day.

Scott Benner 52:42
30 to 35.

Jason 52:45
On a 30 day average. 35.61 units a day.

Scott Benner 52:54
Alright, so we're gonna go with 35. And then tell me this. You eat about three meals a day. What's your total Bolus a day meal Bolus? Average? Does it show you that should right 23. All right. So then Jason, we have as OJ said, when he was running up the highway a problem because think about this, okay. If your total if your total daily insulin is 35, and your average meal, insulin is 23, that means 35 minus 23 is 12. Okay, and if you divide that by 24, that means your Basal is would be about point five an hour. And you were at point seven, and it was taking it away. So I would write all my settings down first of all, Jason, because I don't want to mess you up. Right? But I would wonder if you made your basil first of all point five an hour. I don't expect you would notice any difference in your care at all. You're just not. And then from there. How much of the of the rest of the insulin so your meal insulin is about 23 What about correction insulin? Can you see your corrections?

Jason 54:30
I just actually didn't have screen. Correction when good or did it go? 0.15. So I guess that's the correction Bolus that control IQ is given

Scott Benner 54:49
well then let's think of it this way. How frequently do you go into the pump and add insulin once a day to the tune of a couple of units not even mighty, point five or one. Okay, so pretty, not a lot, not a lot of corrections going on. Yeah, I think I would probably make your Basal point five an hour, and then watch it for six hours, I'm amazed, I'm assuming you're not going to see anything changed because the algorithm has been taking your basil away to begin with. And then I would probably, I would probably give you a little more insulin sensitivity power, and see if that doesn't make your stability lower. That would be kind of my first step there. And not by a lot like not 54 to 44 or something like that. I might go 54 to 52. Watch it for a few hours, see what happens. You know, if you notice a little bit of a decrease, then I I'd ride it for a little bit to see if it's, you know, consistent. And then if it is make a decision if it you know, 51 would be better. But you think one unit moves you 54 Does one unit does one unit move you 54. And you're always automation, right? So you're not sure.

Jason 56:26
You know, as we're talking through all this and working through all this, I should tell you that Tuesday, I just got approved for Omni pot size.

Scott Benner 56:33
Well, that's Listen, that's good. Because you're very, if you're going to try it, you're you're very consistent with the 35 units a day, as your total daily insulin on the pod five cares a lot about total daily insulin. And so if you do 35, I'm just going to split it in half 17 and a half divided by 24. Ah, that'll put your Basal at point seven. So, if you do start on the pod five, I would tell it, I would first of all, figure out what your insulin sensitivity is, right? Now you can get that straight. But if your total daily insulin is about 35, when you set up on the pod five, I would tell it that your Basal is point seven an hour. Okay, and that'll that'll be at 5050. That gives it the best chance to do its thing. But I think there's no harm in figuring out this other stuff for you. Because I think that it's possible that once you go down to maybe around point five an hour for Basal, and get your insulin sensitivity straight, you'd probably be able to shut off control IQ and sit in manual mode and be pretty stable. And then the only thing left to do if that's the case would be to look at your insulin to carb ratio. And see if there's any any space in that at all, one way or the other. Because you know, you want to you want to spike as little as possible without ever experiencing a low later. So, you know, like I just made, we just changed Arden's insulin to carb ratio last night from like, it's gotten weaker, since she's gone off the birth control pills, which I haven't talked about on the show yet, but I think we took it from like 5.5 to 5.3 Last night, like moved it very, very, just a little bit. Because I was noticing or I was noticing the algorithm, she's looping at this point. And I was noticing the algorithm working too hard after her meals. So I was like, let me get some of the insulin out of the, you know, out of the hands of the algorithm and into the carb ratio. Yeah, dude, I would do that. I would try it, then I would try it and manual and see if you stay stable. And that's it. But then and the other thing is I'd write all this down. Because if it gets wonky, you can always just put your settings back and say, Oh, the thing that guy said didn't work. You know? That sounds Does that all make sense? Or have I been unclear about anything?

Jason 59:13
No, it makes sense. It makes sense to me. I mean, I've just never had anyone really talk to me about it. Walk me through it?

Scott Benner 59:21
Well, I think it's, I think it's interesting to do. And I think it's, I think it's necessary, especially moving forward where more and more people are going to use CTRL IQ and on the pod five and whatever Medtronic puts out next. People are going to be using them. And it's not a fear of mine, but it's a concern of mine, that we're going to get farther and farther away from people who actually understand their insulin. And they're leaning on the algorithm so hard that they don't know what they're talking about. I mean, like you're such an interesting story because you have an agency around five I have. And other than the things you do, which are amazing, you know, Pre-Bolus stay on top of high blood sugars, which is a lot of it. You don't really know why you're having this success. You're having the algorithms doing it for you. Yeah, the algorithms doing it. Yeah, yeah. Hey, listen, I don't. Why are you switching pumps? If you're having such good success with control IQ?

Jason 1:00:25
You know, just because Omnipod five learns, and control like, he doesn't learn. And honestly, when I reached out to Omnipod, I was just trying to see if a if I was eligible for it. And I never talked to anybody. I finally got a phone call on Tuesday. They're like, Hey, we got it together. We're ready to ship it to you. I'm like, what?

Scott Benner 1:00:50
That faster?

Jason 1:00:51
Yeah, you know, I always thought that, what from what I've heard, you have to be on a pump for four years. But I haven't been on a pump for four years now. And so the warranty ends up expiring.

Scott Benner 1:01:02
I believe. If you listen to my ads from the pod five, you will hear me say something like, Hold on, let me pull up my ad reads. On the pod five. Yes, I read a line that says this. I'm sorry for all of you who sometimes I make it up. But you know, on the pod five is also available through the pharmacy, which means you can get started without the four year Durable Medical Equipment contract that comes with most insulin pumps, even if you're currently in warranty with another system. So that's something I say during the ad. So that's why you were able to switch is my guess. Hey, for legal reasons, just to cover my butt here. Jason, can you just let me say something real quick. For full safety and risk information, a list of compatible phones as well as clinical trial claims data on Omnipod. Five, you can go to omnipod.com forward slash juice box even though this isn't an ad, I wanted to make sure I wasn't doing wrong. Anybody. So there's my there's my legalese. Okay, well, okay. So how are we going to figure out, you got to email me in a couple days and tell me if this worked. And I'll add like a little like, I'll add your email to the end of the episode. Okay, would you do that?

Jason 1:02:20
So as soon as I when I get it, and I've used it for a little while and let you know how it's going?

Scott Benner 1:02:24
Well, no, I was thinking about the changes to the control IQ. I'd love to know how that goes. Yeah, yeah. Thank you. Yeah, I would really appreciate that. Just because I'd love to either, you know, I'd love for there to be a gap here. And some music play. And then people hear me go. Alright, Jason wrote in, he's like, Hey, your settings messed me up completely. Or, you know, like this worked or that didn't, or I ended up doing this or that, like, I'd love to hear the end of it. So your deficit is not going to go up for a while. So if you have an answer in a few days to a week or so I'd love to know what it is. Sure, sure. I'll do that. Thank you. I really appreciate it. All right. Is there anything else you want to talk about?

Jason 1:03:06
Oh, man. No, I can't really think of anything. I think we've covered it.

Scott Benner 1:03:11
Thank you.

Jason 1:03:13
I think we've done a good job here.

Scott Benner 1:03:15
I appreciate that. Thank you. I appreciate you coming on and sharing. And I mean, it's, it's funny, because I think that people could listen to this and think Jason is just like locking into this, it just works. But what I hear is, algorithms are really valuable. And so much so that you're living a fairly unencumbered life with an amazing agency. Like to me, you're the holy grail of this conversation like this is because what I think is, if you weren't great about Pre-Bolus thing, obviously your agency would be higher, you'd have more spikes they last longer, etc. But I mean, how much worse could it get? You're at a five a one C or lower? You could, you know, I don't know, like I can, I don't know there are going to be people who don't know how to do any of this, who still might end up with sixes, mid sixes are seven a one sees for somebody who previously could have very well been in the nine to the 10s. It's an astonishing improvement for someone's health. And I think you're proving it out by your story. That they can be valuable for anybody. And if you're willing to put in extra work like you're doing, which, by the way, I mean, how much it's not that much extra work, I don't imagine right Pre-Bolus Singh, etc.

Jason 1:04:41
No, no, I mean, you just glance down at your screen. Look in 30 seconds that takes about some even that.

Scott Benner 1:04:48
Jason, you've got the attitude that I think would make Jenny very happy and you're making me happy. Yeah, seriously because, you know, it's so easy to You hear I heard somebody talking about the other day like, I have trouble this, this person said, I have trouble hearing the beeping and willing myself to do something about it. And you don't? That's not you at all, is it?

Jason 1:05:16
No, you've got to be willing to do something about it. I mean, if it's beeping, it's beeping for a reason either. Fan ignore you

Scott Benner 1:05:23
have to fix it. Yeah. What is it about your personality? Do you think that leads you to that?

Jason 1:05:31
I guess that's just how I'm wired. Yeah,

Scott Benner 1:05:33
it's no, there's no answer to these questions. It's they're fascinated to hear spoken out and talk through. But I because I agree with you, I hear the beeping. And I think we'll do something now. And then we won't have to worry about it later. But a lot of people hear it and go, Oh, I'll get to it. And then their blood sugar goes 131 4151 80. And they're like, Oh, I can't believe this. My blood sugar is a mess. And they make a big Bolus they get low later than they're upset about that. And all I can think is, you could have just done something three hours ago that would have required such a small amount of insulin, there's no way you would have gotten low afterwards, and you wouldn't have this higher blood sugar. And that just makes sense to me, and I understand doesn't make sense to everybody or that everybody's not wired the same way. But I do like them hearing that. If they were more. I don't want to say proactive, although I guess that's I was gonna say proactive. Was my head. Yeah, yeah. But it's it right. If you're more proactive, it takes less time, and comes with less hassle than putting it off and then having to deal with it later. And I guess if that makes

Jason 1:06:38
easier to fix, it's easier to fix a 140 than it is to fix a 180 or 200.

Scott Benner 1:06:43
Jason, you really believe that the stuff I say on this podcast, and it's working for you? I do. Thank you. I appreciate you sharing that. I mean, it really, it's validating for me, so thank you.

Jason 1:06:56
I will say though, that if you're Disneyland or Disney world chasing around a seven year old, you probably don't need to Pre-Bolus

Scott Benner 1:07:04
Right, right. Well, that's a good point a bag of Skittles. Are your variables very similar every day?

Jason 1:07:13
Yeah, usually. Okay.

Scott Benner 1:07:14
So when you so interesting, so you go over to Disney. Your blood sugar starts to fall.

Jason 1:07:21
Yeah, we walk 12 miles in that one day we were there from when the gates open. And we left at like 1030 at night.

Scott Benner 1:07:29
How did you handle it with your blood sugar's just were you just kind of offsetting with candy.

Jason 1:07:34
Skittles, Skittles, one scale equals one card. So

Scott Benner 1:07:38
were you on control? Did you consider going to exercise mode? You know that. If I'm not with you, you're lost. I I'm gonna have to I'm gonna have to come down there, get in your pocket. And we're going to talk some more. Yeah, I wouldn't be interested. Like I don't not interested enough for you to spend countless 1000s of dollars to go back to Disney again. But if you're in a situation like that, again, I'd be super interested if exercise mode would have helped you.

Jason 1:08:08
Oh, we went skiing a couple years ago. And I did use exercise mode for that. That worked out pretty well.

Scott Benner 1:08:13
Interesting. That's great. Well, listen, man. You're doing terrific. Nobody needs to tell you anything. So but but if you do it, and please don't feel any pressure. But if you do make little bump around changes, I'd love to hear how they went. I will I promise, I appreciate that, hey, keep cleaning the water. I will such a big deal. Chasing the hallmark of a great society is is functioning sewer and the delivery of clean water. It's, it's, it's it's the basis of everything. Really,

Jason 1:08:52
I'll tell you something that you probably never thought of and your listeners probably have never thought of. If you live on a river, trace that river up to another town and think those people have already drank this water and picked it out. And now we're drinking it.

Scott Benner 1:09:07
I remember the first time my kids said something about that the toilet goes somewhere different than the sink and I said no it doesn't. There's just one pipe in the bathroom in the basement. It all goes down into that pipe. And they were just like frozen. They're like what I mean seriously like, what a what an accomplishment to take wastewater and turn it into drinkable water. It's an it's a massive it's a massive accomplishment of humanity. It really is. What What's the is there a river somewhere in China Hold on a second, where they make blue jeans nearby and the river runs blue. Have you ever seen that? Let me see if I'm making that up or not?

Jason 1:10:04
I have not heard that. I wouldn't be surprised, but I'm not up on my Chinese news.

Scott Benner 1:10:12
Why? Why Jason? Are you busy with that? Having a kid and everything and? Yeah. So these stories are mostly from like 10 years ago, so but yeah, I guess you can like from from space, taking a photo you can actually see the darkness the blue that comes down this river into a body of water. Is that an actuary? When that happens? Look at me. Yes, you were estuary. Very good, Jason. You're paying attention in college. Sometimes I was saying an actuary somebody who like deals with like, managing uncertainty. Listen, nobody listening knew but you. estuary the tidal mouth of a large river where the tide meets the string. All right. Well, everybody can go look that up on their own. Jason, thank you for doing this. I appreciate it very much.

Jason 1:11:14
You sure thank you for having me on. I enjoyed it.

Scott Benner 1:11:17
As my pleasure really was. I want to thank Jason for coming on and sharing his story. I want to thank Jason for coming on and sharing his story and I want to thank Omni pod and Dexcom for sponsoring the episode dexcom.com forward slash juice box and Omni pod.com forward slash juice box go yourself a Dexcom G seven a Dexcom G six Omnipod five or an Omnipod dash. Get your gear as they glow up? Is that what the kids call it? glow up your Gear game Dexcom and Omnipod. Thank you so much for listening. If you hang on for a minute, I'm going to read Jason's email for you. Don't forget to check out the private Facebook group Juicebox Podcast type one diabetes and don't judge all Philly fans by me.

All right, talk about transparency and honesty. Let me read you Jason's email. There's two emails, actually. The first one said, Hey, Scott, I tried to make any adjustments to my Susa might cease. I was like, to my T slim that you suggested. But they didn't really work out for me. The new Basal rates wouldn't hold me steady. And I would just continue to creep up. But thank you for the suggestions. I started the only pod five last Thursday so far. Blah, blah, blah, it goes on and on Omnipod trainer, they changed his Basal rates, blah, blah, blah. And here's the follow up. This is

since a few months after that email I just read through sorry, while I was counting months in my head. Jason says again. Hey, Scott, Friday, I went to the editor to get my first day one see since being on on the pod five, and it was 5.2 with a standard deviation of 27 and 93% and range. I mean, let's go up from five on the T slim, but the time period was over Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays and a week long trip. So I'm not disappointed. We made a few adjustments at this past. We made a few adjustments this past weekend. Overall, I'm pretty happy with it. The lack of tubing not having to take it off or showering and not having to change it. Thank you for everything you do. All right. That's uh, that's it. I'm done. I have to be honest with you. I am tired and I gotta stop. So I hope you're enjoying the podcast. It's late at night here when I'm doing these ads and bumpers and everything. And Scotty got asleep. I'll talk to you tomorrow.


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#934 iLet Bionic Pancreas with Ed Damiano

Scott Benner

Ed Damiano is the Founder of Beta Bionics and he's here today to talk about the iLet Bionic Pancreas. 

You can always listen to the Juicebox Podcast here but the cool kids use: Apple Podcasts/iOS - Spotify - Amazon MusicGoogle Play/Android - iHeart Radio -  Radio PublicAmazon Alexa or wherever they get audio.

+ Click for EPISODE TRANSCRIPT


DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.

Scott Benner 0:00
Hello friends, and welcome to episode 934 of the Juicebox Podcast.

On today's episode of The Juicebox Podcast Ed Damiano from beta bionics is here to talk about the iLet bionic pancreas. Edie and I had an almost two hour long conversation about islet. I got in a ton of listener questions. Edie told me all about the company, how things started, where it is now when he expects people to be holding an eyelet and so much more. While you're listening. Please remember that nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice, medical or otherwise, always consult a physician before making any changes to your healthcare plan, or becoming bold with insulin. Here are three quick ways you can save money. Your first month of online therapy betterhelp.com forward slash juice box Use the link to save 10% off that first month. The offer code juice box at checkout at cozy earth.com will save you 35% off your entire order. And if you want to try ag one, go to athletic greens.com forward slash juice box when you do you'll get five free travel packs and a free year's supply of vitamin D with your first order

this episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by us med us med is the place where my daughter gets her diabetes supplies from and you can to go to us med.com forward slash juice box or call 888-721-1514 To get your free benefits check us med always provides 90 days worth of supplies. And they have fast and free shipping. They carry everything from insulin pumps to CGM diabetes testing supplies you want the libre to the libre three, the Dexcom G six or Dexcom G seven US med has it. You want Omnipod five you want Omnipod dash us med has that too. They have tandem T slim x two. Oh my goodness, they have it if you're looking for it, US med.com forward slash juicebox. Before it comes on, let me tell you two things. There are some ads that are in this episode. But I'm not going to put them in the conversation there at the end. So if you want to hear them, please hang out. And listen, I appreciate that very much. I want to remind you to go to the private Facebook group Juicebox Podcast type one diabetes head in there. There's 40,000 active members. It is the most lively and lovely diabetes Facebook group known to man. That's my opinion. If you're looking for the bold beginnings, diabetes, Pro Tip series, type two diabetes Pro Tip series defining thyroid, all of the things that people who listen to the podcast love. If you can't find them in your podcast app, go to juicebox podcast.com. There's a menu at the top, you'll be able to find everything there. Or if you're in the private Facebook group hit the feature tab at the top of the group. If you have a question about diabetes, or autoimmune issues in general, we've covered it on the Juicebox Podcast. Welcome back, even though you don't remember ever being on the show. I barely remember talking to you, but you were definitely on this podcast in the first year of it. I cannot find in the list anywhere like what would you have been calling it eyelet back then?

Ed Damiano 3:34
No, no. So if you think it was 2015, we definitely had give my wife was the one who named it the eyelet. I called it the bionic pancreas before we had the name islet and she came up with the name pilot. And I think that happened in 2013 is my guess. But we weren't you know, we were using both terms sort of interchange, there was no company in 2013 or even 2014.

Scott Benner 3:58
Wow. Well, so then how did I? Well, how did this all start? I'm assuming you or your child has diabetes, right?

Ed Damiano 4:05
Yeah. So that is how I got involved with this. So my, my background is an applied mathematics. And specifically I do what I would describe as mathematical biology. That's what I used to study. And what does that mean, I would you know, I was looking at mathematical models of how the inner ear works and fluid structure interactions that happen when you move your head through space, the vestibular system and your sense of balance and equilibrium. Understanding the underlying mechanics of that was very much a mathematics problem. And I spent some time working on that, I got very interested in blood flow in the very smallest micro vessels in the microcirculation blood flow through capillaries and understanding various important physiological phenomena that are connected to blood flow in micro vessels. And that became a big part of my research effort. And that's kind of what I did it was extremely theoretical, not not, not the least bit Practical, you know, I would write published papers in the Journal of fluid mechanics and, you know, PNAS and things like that. And, you know, there were three people who read the papers, and I was two of them. You know, that's what I used to say. So it was very, very arcane stuff and, and I enjoyed it very much. And certainly I could make a bit make build a career around it. But when my son developed type one in infancy, he was 11 months old, it became pretty clear that, you know, I had some basic skill sets that I could lead to the problem of building a device that could control blood sugar levels. And I had a student at the time, Feroz Alkhateeb, who was he was a PA, he was a master student in my lab, and he just come over to the US and he was doing some work in my area of blood flow, I had him working on a problem that he wasn't much interested in, frankly. And he'd finished finished his master's thesis, and he's sort of looking around for something else. And just five months after Ross arrived, David develop type one he was, as I said, 11 months old, my wife's a pediatrician. And she actually made the diagnosis. And I turned to fear also a year or so later saying, Listen, I've been thinking about a device that could deliver insulin and glucagon to automatically regulate glucose and people with type one. And at the heart of that is software is smart, intelligent software that determines how much insulin and glucagon to deliver, to get good glucose control based on a continuous stream of data from something like a continuous glucose monitor that didn't really exist in 2000, or 2001. Or two, there was a gluco watch, you may recall the sickness gluco watch. That was in 2000. And that didn't work particularly well, but it did get FDA approved. And so I envisioned that we would build the software that makes those those dosing decisions. And he got really interested in that as such, offered that up as a potential PhD project, and that became the summon substance of his PhD. And that was around 2002. So a little over 20 years, we started thinking about what that centerpiece, you know, technology would do, how it might work. And he started working on developing the mathematical algorithms. Initially, it was a single algorithm now we have three separate algorithms that run in parallel on the island. And that was at that time, he and I were at the University of Illinois, I was a professor of mechanical engineering, and this is in Urbana Champaign, and he was my PhD student. He finishes his PhD under under, in my lab at at ui UC Illinois and then I went to Boston University in 2004, took a faculty position in in Biomedical Engineering, Feroz, came over to Boston and did a postdoc in my lab. It's this fear still works with us today at beta bionics. So he's our VP of research innovation. And, and so he stuck with this project from the very beginning, we came to BU and started animal studies looking at glucose control with the algorithms that he'd been developing for his PhD in pigs that we could induce diabetes like pathology in and we could test the system in, you know, basically pigs with diabetes. We did that for about three or four years. And then I met Stephen Russell, my clinical collaborator of many years now 17 years, I think, in 2006 at MGH at Joslin diabetes Center, he was doing the fellowship he was doing as a postdoc fellow there. And so we started collaborating on bringing that system to human trials. And by 2008, we'd started clinical trials at the Massachusetts General Hospital Clinical Research Center in the inpatient setting.

Scott Benner 8:33
While you've been talking, it occurred to me, I don't think you've been on the podcast.

Ed Damiano 8:38
I mean, I totally believe you if you said it either way. I

Scott Benner 8:42
like something about when you said Boston, it hit it hit me and I researched. I researched not research, but read dash search my my blog just now. Yeah. And in 2016, January, a woman named Kelly was on to talk about being in your trial. That's what this is. Yeah, that's

Ed Damiano 9:03
much later and

Scott Benner 9:04
your name like, rings my bell because of that. And obviously, I know who you are, like, you know, we've never met before. I know your face. You and I have never met before. And if somebody asked me to describe you, I could do it. Right. I'm not aware of who you are. But yeah, I think that's what I was thinking of. Wow, that was Yeah, no kidding. Okay.

Ed Damiano 9:23
I mean, I've done a lot of interviews, as you might imagine. And so I could easily be convinced that I given an interview to just about anybody

Scott Benner 9:29
I want to be, I want to be completely honest, there are lovely people who helped me with the Facebook group. And if someone asks a question, I'll say, I don't know Have I ever said that and somebody else will have to come in and tell me if I said it, or I'm beyond being upset or or embarrassed by that. So that's how you get this whole thing going. That's fascinating, but my daughter was two and she was diagnosed like right after her second birthday. I do not meet a lot of people whose kids were younger than that. Usually.

Ed Damiano 9:56
No, it's extremely rare. I mean, I think it's, you know, probably Just a handful of people who are diagnosed under the age of one with actually with type one, you have some kids who get this congenital, this congenital, this neonatal diabetes. That is something it's exceedingly rare but it happens and it's often misdiagnosed as type one. We actually thought David might have that but neonatal usually see that around six months of age and he was around 11 months, so he was actually old for neonatal. We did some testing and it was pretty clear that he doesn't have neonatal as type one. But he's been on an insulin pump since 13 months of age. Wow. Which

Scott Benner 10:33
one? Did he have them? Mini med fiber? Wait.

Ed Damiano 10:37
We used his old mini med pump in the big studies. So once he graduated to the Animus we took his mini med pump and put it into big studies. Yeah, about that. Do you have other children? Yeah, my, my daughter is two years older than David. So she's 26. Now David's 24 And she's about she just finished grad school and she's gonna go into another grad program in the fall.

Scott Benner 10:58
Wow. Any other autoimmune your family? Yeah,

Ed Damiano 11:01
Emily herself. She has celiac disease. Okay. So that was diagnosed. Toby was doing a workup on her just for short stature. And she thought maybe she should be able to taller. And she, she ended up having celiac that's sort of in the, in the, in the panel when you look at look at that kind of thing. So she, she was around 12 or so when we figured

Scott Benner 11:23
that out. My daughter was the smallest person in her school. And we figured out she had hypothyroidism and she's 18 now and she's 570

Ed Damiano 11:31
Good for you. So she did just fine. My wife's five, seven.

Scott Benner 11:34
We went to good height. Yeah, but we got it. I mean, I'll never know what would happen if it wouldn't have got caught but it was hard not to catch. She was like basically passing out like asleep. She had no like energy and no energy at all. Yeah. But it was just really something like, she was the tiniest little person. And then now she's just isn't it's really something else what the right, the right thing can do to help you. Alright, so that's got to be enough. Everybody's like, just ask the question, Scott.

Ed Damiano 12:07
Well, we certainly have a kinship there with a very young person and you know, to watch it through infancy, diabetes progress through infancy and toddlerhood and, and, you know, preschool age, and then the school aged kid and the teenager and now the young adult, to see that whole arc pass before me over the past 20 years is quite amazing thing.

Scott Benner 12:26
It gives you a perspective that a lot of people don't have either you can kind of really step back sometimes and see all of the different impacts that I think get lost on people from time to time. Yeah, yeah. It's, it really is held been a hell of a journey. Okay. So, modern day a few weeks ago, I was speaking at an event, I met Stephen Russell, right. He works at UC did. And he was like, you know, spilling the beans that you guys were about to get an FDA approval. So tell me about that process a little bit. So once you say we've got a thing, it works. This is the thing we want the FDA to say yes to? Like, when was that? How long? Have you been at that part?

Ed Damiano 13:07
Great question. So I think it'll surprise you. In order to be really ready to submit an application to get market approval or market clearances, it's called by the FDA for this device, you have to have a clinical data set that is collected in a pivotal trial. And what that means is that you you conduct a study that you design with the FDA, you work with the FDA to design what that trial looks like. And it has to you have to capture data in such a way that you're you've got a good quality system wrapped around it and you're pulling the data. Together, we use the Job Center for Health Research as the contract research organization to help us put that package together. And then you build a clinical clinical study report at the end of the trial. And the Job Center puts this together you know, we have input into that that document, but ultimately, once the clinical study reports are written that has all the data that was captured from that pivotal trial, and all the other testing for the device is done, which is enormous amount of work as you're building the system from scratch the eyelet is in fact device it's built at beta bionics not by contract manufacturing, we build in our own facility in Irvine, California. And building a device is a non trivial task, a durable medical a piece of durable medical equipment. And so it has its own quality system wrapped around it. We have a manufacturing process at debated bionics to build the system, and then in undergoes an enormous amount of testing all kinds of tests that were done for insulin pumps also had to be done for a bionic pancreas, along with this clinical data set that was captured to this very large pivotal trial, you pull all that together in a document that is 10s of 1000s of pages long, literally. And we submit that to the FDA. So the clinical trial, the data needed for that trial was collected was was basically in hand in December of 2021. Okay, all right, so the trial mode the trial the substitute trial happened to January in October of 2021 and the jibs And it worked really quickly to lock the database after the last participant last visit in October of 21. And within really, essentially, within two months, they had the readout of the of the primary outcome analysis that we were, we were waiting for. We were very pleased with the results. And then went the process of building the clinical study report into the early spring, early part of 2022. Okay, and so by 2022, we were 20, March of 22, we submit the application, and we got clearance in May of 23. So 14 months later,

Scott Benner 15:31
I'm gonna forget the I don't know the terminology. But were you able to claim that your device was similar to another device? Or did you have to start from scratch?

Ed Damiano 15:38
No. So we used I hope you're not getting this guy doing some yard work here. I'm hoping not getting that. Hopefully you're editing concat do something magical.

Scott Benner 15:49
Is it seems okay. Yeah, I think all right, microphone I made them send you is very close to your face. So

Ed Damiano 15:55
yeah, I think it's working well. And I've got the headset, everything I can hear up as long as you can't. That's great. So yes, the the hybrid closed loop systems on the market today, we could use one of those as the predicate device to as they call it to our application. And so the FDA suggested that we use that as the predicate device. And we went forward with that, that submission with that in mind.

Scott Benner 16:17
So are you able to get the device okayed, and the processor created at this, then the algorithm at the same time? Or did you have to make the pump, prove the pump work, and then step forward and do the next piece?

Ed Damiano 16:30
No, in fact, we had no intention of ever building an insulin pump. And I really want to make it clear that the bionic pancreas isn't an insulin pump. And really, and that's not just that's not just semantics, it's really not, there is no way to program Basal rates, carbs, and some ratios or correction factors on the island. There's no setting of parameters like that. So you can't operate the island in any configuration other than closed loop. So it's every 100% of every dose is determined autonomously by the device. And even if the CGM goes offline, you enter fingerstick measurements to keep it going. And it will use the fingerstick BG to determine the dose at the time if necessary, and dose automatically at that time. The more finger sticks you enter when the CGM is offline, the more glucose better glucose control you can get, because it can have has more opportunity to check in. But it gives Basal insulin when the CGM is offline because it figured out the Basal rate. So there's no insulin pump under the hood like there is with hybrid systems. There's no manual mode to go through this thing. There's no manual mode. And why that's important, is because there's a number of reasons why it's important in the context of your question. Every other hybrid closed loop, oh, the hybrid closed loop systems. And I would say the iLet isn't, isn't that. But the hybrid closed loop systems started as insulin pumps. And they all started in a world where you didn't need clinical data. Insulin pumps don't require clinical data, they require what's called human factor studies where people come into a conference room, they won't hook up to the device, but they'll go to the user interface and show that they can do the basic functions. And then if that human factors report goes into their market application, so the tandem system, the TCM pump, for example, the Omni pod five, the Medtronic system, the Omnipod, not five, but the early Omni pod system, and the Medtronic insulin pumps all went through human factors testing, but they didn't require any clinical trial data, we did not make a user interface where the islet could be a standalone met and manual insulin pump, in which case, if we had done that, we could have put that through the FDA a few years earlier, had a manual insulin pump and would have needed a clinical trial for that product. But to add the algorithms needs the clinical trial, we did it all simultaneously. So not to

Scott Benner 18:29
be too obtuse, but basically, the islet is like a self driving car with no steering wheel and no pedals. And the algorithm you get it drives you where you go. That's not

Ed Damiano 18:38
obtuse at all. Those are that is the that is exactly the analogy I make all the time. Okay, great, right. So it's like sitting in the in the passenger seat of a self driving car, you can't adjust the insulin dose, you can't, you can't override an insulin dose, you can't give a Bolus, right, so you can watch the thing, control your blood sugar, right, you can watch the self driving car go. And you can watch it, turn it steering wheel and so forth. But it really is determining 100% of every dose. Now you can interface one way to interface with the device is to let it know that you're having a meal and we have something called a meal announcement, which we can talk about. But even that when you issue a meal announcement, you're not determining the size of the insulin dose that is delivered in response to that. It figures that out by itself. And then it comes to know what that appropriate dose should be when you give a meal announcement for breakfast, lunch and dinner. And then it cleans up the rest downstream of that we can talk a bit more detail about how that works. I think it'd be a worthwhile thing to talk about. I

Scott Benner 19:37
know for certain I have one more question about that. Then we can definitely move on. Am I wrong? Just say that in the very, very beginning. You imagine this happening with a tandem pump?

Ed Damiano 19:46
No, no. Yeah. So no, no, not No at all. Actually, in the very beginning. I imagined it happening with something called The Aviator pump resume. You've never heard of that. So Dean came in had built a pump that was So 510 K cleared in a traditional insulin pump, and he licensed that to Abbott diabetes care. Abbott had a possession of this Abbott navigator which my son used from 2008 to 2012. It was in the US at that time. And it was a continuous glucose monitor. Phenomenal one, really. And the notion was we were working with the guys at Abbott, to put our algorithms in between the aviator insulin pump and the navigator CGM. And we would be the smarts in the middle. And what happened was Abbott had a change of heart. And they they did not proceed with the aviator pump. They never marketed even though it's 510 K cleared and they the navigator itself. They abandon that product in favor of what is now believed right in Flash glucose monitoring. So I found myself without a partner. I never intended to start a company never intended to build a hardware platform. My intention was to take the software that Feroz and I were working on and collaborate with Steven to test it and human trials and then license it off or be you Boston University with license that off to an abbot or a Medtronic or a tandem. So we did start talking with tandem. He's one of the reasons tandem is called tandem, as I understood it from 2011 is because they were always contemplating multiple fluids pushing multiple fluids, not just one. Okay. And so there was great interest in in a dual chamber T slim pump and I was working with a guy named Sean St. Who is now our current CEO at beta. Sean 2000 companion. Am I right about that? Well, he was not when I met him. When I met him. He was a young whippersnapper, engine engineer at tandem diabetes in 2011. And he approached me at an ADA conference. And he said we're about to get we think we're about to get 510 K clearance for the T slim pump, which he was right few months later he did. And I started working directly with Shawn in 2012 to build our first mobile device that ran on an iphone four s and commanded insulin and glucagon doses out of two independent tandem T slim pumps. And the woman Kelly you interviewed would have used that system. So you put two TCM pumps in your pocket one delivered insulin one was repurposed to deliver glucagon and this giant brick that an iPhone for us on one side and a G for Dexcom. Receiver all bundled together. Right. And that was our iPhone, bionic pancreas for about eight years. We use that thing.

Scott Benner 22:20
Wow. Wow, that's something look how far it's come and how long it takes us? Yes, a little humbling. Actually.

Ed Damiano 22:27
It For Me in particular. I mean, I never expected this first one never expected to build the whole thing or build this build the team that built the whole thing. But I never would have expected it would take as long as it did and cost as much money as it did. Yeah. It just it's just a huge undertaking of infrastructure to do something.

Scott Benner 22:45
It's funny, because when you talk about the first idea, like it occurs to me couldn't, couldn't any pump company just accept a bunch of algorithms from a bunch of different places and say, Look, just choose the one you want to use. And we could adapt, but I guess nothing. Everybody wants to be proprietary at some point, right. But it's

Ed Damiano 23:02
not just that you're right, that has historically been the case. But until recently, the FDA didn't make that easy. And they and the FDA sort of wanted to get out of its own way. It didn't like the fact that there are all these different companies making algorithms, mostly academic groups back then. Right? Not so much companies, but mostly academic groups, and companies were licensing algorithms from academia. But then you had a few companies making pumps, and you had a few companies making sensors. And so initially, the idea was at the FDA is that we want these sensors, these continuous glucose monitors of which there were like three on the market and now they're there a few more to be able to talk to any one of these pumps. Yeah, and integrate with any one of them. And then they evolve their thinking to say Okay, now let's allow these pumps you know, the a certain type of pump to not only talk to any one of these CGM, which they call they dubbed I CGM, you know, inter operable continuous glucose monitor. But then they wanted to, they made this thing called ACE pump, which was a device that that could talk to anyone these icy GMs and could host algorithms. And you could just plug and play this ace pump can work with this IC GM, that one or the other one. And this icy gem can work with these three A's pumps, and that they wanted that interoperability. And then they said to sort of flesh it out. The third technology in this piece right in the system is the are the algorithms and then they came up with something called AI AGC inter interoperable automated glucose controller, which was one of these plug and play algorithm 510 case or market applications. So now, you could have an AI AGC tested in one ace pump with once I CGM and once you do the clinical data, collect the clinical data for that ace pump IGC you could put it in different ace pumps without having to do another clinical trial. And you can make a talk to other ICBMs without having to do another clinical trial. So they're trying to be able to really promote this interoperability and all this different cross communication in this in this ecosystem of C GMs pumps and algorithms. And so they gave birth to all of these these three different regulatory pathways. And now we have an interoperable space that for the first time, now that as of just recently, in addition to the G six Dexcom, which is a, you know, II CGM, there is now the G seven Dexcom on the market, which is an IC CGM. And there is the libre three, which is an IC GM, it's the first time we've had more than one. I CGM out there.

Scott Benner 25:26
Right? Did you ever consider licensing it to pump companies? Or was that that's

Ed Damiano 25:31
what I wanted to do is what you that was my initial intent. And that's why I was working so closely with Abbott. And the problem with this was that when you start working with the med tech industry, the it can be it can be they can become quite capricious. And the reason is, especially big med tech, you have these divisions, diabetes divisions in these big med tech companies. So they do a bunch of things, right. But one thing they do is diabetes, and they have a diabetes division, and they have a precedent of that division. The president of that division, if they are very successful, very often gets promoted into some other space like cardiovascular within that company, leaving in that person's wake the need for his or her replacement. So another president comes in with totally different objectives. And they might say, you know, I want to pivot away from type one, type two, and this technology that my predecessor has been been investing in, I'm going to divest all of our interests in that and move into a new product, then they carve out their own little legacy for themselves. And so I couldn't rely on the med tech industry, I saw no way to do that. When there's that kind of capriciousness happening in the system. It's built right in right to the way these companies evolve.

Scott Benner 26:35
You don't want to spend six years turning yourself into the right quarterback, and then your coach leaves and he says, I want to run the ball more. And now. Now you're exactly I got it. Okay. Wow. I don't think I have any more questions around that part of it. I have.

Ed Damiano 26:51
I mean, there's a lot of history, right. And we can talk for an entire podcast on the history of this. Yeah, for sure. But the long and the short of it is we ultimately evolved our thinking through experience that we had to build this thing ourselves from the ground up and soup to nuts.

Scott Benner 27:04
And so I let because it's not an insulin pump, it needed a different name. So I that word just doesn't exist in your day.

Ed Damiano 27:13
Yeah, yeah. So it's funny because if you think about the evolution of the of my terminology, I go from the nerdiest of terms that you could imagine like a geeky engineer. And if you look at my slide decks from 2008 910 11, my, my terminology gets worse and worse. And I hit an all time low in 2011. So initially, I called it a closed loop blood glucose control system, which just rolls right off your tongue, right? And then I realized that that's just not, you know, it's a very academic, you know, thing engineer in particular would say things like that. And then I tried to come up with better terms. And I never liked artificial pancreas, because artificial practice tells you what it isn't. It isn't a real pancreas. And we know it's not a real pancreas. Can we have something that's more descriptive? So my ward, my lowest moment was when I called it a prosthetic pancreas. And I may as well just shown a picture of a little pump with crutches on either side of it, right. But in fact, it wasn't a I mean, it is a prosthesis, if you will, and in a way, but it's just not the right terminology. The next year, I said, What is it let's be positively descriptive, and not negatively descriptive, what it isn't. And then I looked, I thought about bionic pancreas. And then I looked in the dictionary, and it's you know, it's it's a technology that imitates you know, biological processes through through electronic electromechanical systems and electronic means it's exactly what we do. And so I coined that term in I think, 2012. And I've used it ever since. And that's kind of a category. It's a bionic pancreas, who my wife came along a couple years later and said, I know what the, you know what the device should be, should be called, it should be called an eyelet binding pack, because obviously an homage to the islets of Langerhans. Yeah,

Scott Benner 28:46
that's a great idea. Also, I don't want to get off topic before we get on topic. But how come you're an engineer and so personable?

Ed Damiano 28:54
I don't know. I mean, I think that AI engineers get a bad rap. You know, I think many of them can be quite personable. Excellent. I'm

Scott Benner 29:03
just like, well, you're like a good storyteller. And

Ed Damiano 29:07
you know, when you tell the story enough times it becomes

Scott Benner 29:09
rote? Yeah, I There are a couple things in my head that if I say I can shut off while I'm sending them off course. Alright. So you've got, you've got your clearance now, is it? I mean, I am assuming you're a smaller company. So what's it like? There's got to be a ramp up plan, right? Like you're gonna launch and then like, how do you foresee that going?

Ed Damiano 29:32
Yeah. So I'll give you a little bit insight into into, you know, our vision for how that should work. Remember, we did, as I said earlier, a pivotal trial. So we took the iLet. By the end of 2020. We had basically locked this thing into this little device that looks just like this thing I was just showing you. And we could then with funding from the National Institutes of Health, we had a large grant from the NIH to help pay for this study. It was what's called an investigator initiated trial. So beta bionics didn't spawn To the study, it was, it was basically sponsored by that jape Center for Health Research. The grant came in through my lab at Boston University, and went and dispensed out to 16 clinical sites. And so we had subcontracts sites at the university, North Carolina, Chapel Hill at Stanford University and masters, General Hospital, and so on and so forth. We had 16 sites. And we chose these sites carefully. Stephen Russell, myself, and Roy Beck sort of went through across the country and said, we really want to pick sites that can bring a lot of ethnic diversity into the trial. So we don't have you know, a study that's consistent, almost entirely of white, very wealthy, and very educated people, but rather a study that has a much better cross section and a better mirror of the population of the population at large. So we chose sites in northern Florida, in southern Texas, in Detroit, in Atlanta, Southern California, where we could get in a lot of ethnic diversity into our cohort and bring a bring a broader demographic into the study. So we designed that study with those 16 sites as the targeted places where they each bring in anywhere between 20 and 35 participants over the course of that 2021 calendar year. And that was really always my my thinking about how we should bring this thing out. We should start by using those sites as the places to launch the device. And when Sean St. came on board as CEO over the summer, you know, I think that jives well with him, he's like, Okay, well, I'll have we'll build a sales team. And they'll break up the country into sort of eight. It's a targeted launch, we break the region of the country up to eight territories, within each of those territories resides one or two of our pivotal trial sites from that study. And so those are the people who are in my mind, the de facto experts of using the island are the only ones have ever used it. In a close to real world setting our trial was designed to be a very good approximation of real world usage, people were on the device for 13 weeks. So they understood the device in a way nobody else could, until you use it, you can really understand and appreciate it. So we thought that was the best place to start. Now, in each of those regions, most territories, there are several other sites that are also going to participate in our launch. But we are moving very quickly. And because we're a small company, as you mentioned, we have, there's a kind of agility that we have, that allows us to go from getting 510 K clearance of a in a company that's never launched a product to launching the product within the space of about a month. So you know, we have certainly launched the iLet. It is, you know, the we have we're using a distributor distributor Durable Medical Equipment approach to distributing the device like like, like a traditional insulin pump would follow. And so we you know, we've shipped our product out to distributors, and they can in turn, ship those two people with type one diabetes and traducida, typically in those regions, and those regions covered a big section of the US, right? And so we just want to get our feet wet in the first few months and just get experience with the pivotal trial sites, and then expand and add territories in the fall. And then more sites as well.

Scott Benner 33:00
Do you see it as a years long project? To get up? Like when when Will everybody be able to walk into their doctor's office and say eyelid? Yeah, good question.

Ed Damiano 33:10
So right now at launch, we were we weren't able to get for example, Medicare and Medicaid Services to cover the device. You know, this is a device that you would, you would use private insurance and government insurance to pay for the device, you'd have a copay, just like a traditional insulin pump and similar similar with the supply with the supplies, but you can't we weren't allowed to negotiate with CMS Center for Medicare Medicaid Services. Prior to 510 K clearance, which we only obtained, you know, just less about four weeks, little less than four weeks ago, once we got 510 K clearance, we can start entering into a contract with CMS. And that takes anywhere between, you know, two and three months. So anybody on Medicare Medicaid Services, needs to know that we can't get it out to them right away just because there was no way we could have teed that up

Scott Benner 33:56
if I didn't have the conversation before the clearance.

Ed Damiano 33:59
Exactly. But with with with with commercial insurance, we were able to through the distributor Network Distributors across the country that sell insulin pump supplies, we were able to set up contracts with them. So the minute we got clearance, they could place an order. So we literally took orders right away upon FDA clearance that allows us to get out to a lot of people in the country in the you know, in the back half of this year, who have private pay. And we're hoping by say the fourth quarter maybe or maybe even sooner than that third or fourth quarter, we'll get government insurance on board once that contract sells and that allow us again to then penetrate further out and reach more people who do

Scott Benner 34:36
you see as your target user group?

Ed Damiano 34:41
The vast majority people type one but specifically, we see this technology is playing really well in the hands of people who are on MDI therapy in the hands of people who are willing to and I think this is most people will let go Have their diabetes management as much as possible. And what I would say is who it's not for, is who we call the knob Turner's and I would have to admit that I am probably one such person. Right? And yeah, I bet you are as well. Yeah. Right now, probably. So what do we do? Well, we have this little tiny child in front of us who has type one diabetes, and we are going to pour all of our energies into making sure this kids glucose is tightly controlled as possible without destroying their lives, right, we don't want to interfere with their lives so much that they're just, they're just a little experiment. So you have to do it in a way that, you know, they can coexist with this, but you want to give them as good of care as you can. So we were all over this little guy. And we grew him up that way. And he organically began taking more and more responsibility of his diabetes management. But I have to say that in taking over that responsibility over the course of a decade, to the point where he goes off to college with a animus pump, and a G six Dexcom, or G five Dexcom, back then he's doing a really good job managing his diabetes, and he is a tinkerer, he's going to adjust to fine tuning of insulin dosing, he's all over it, and multiple times a day. Now, many people who do that and do well with that are going to be able to use the eyelet successfully and comfortably, there may be an adjustment that they need to make and get used to handing the steering wheel off to some autonomous system. But they can sometimes make the adjustment. There are others who won't be able to, it'll provoke too much anxiety, and they just won't get through it. And the reality is, you don't know what sort of person you are until you try it. So living with the eyelid is the only way to find out if you can let go the wheel as he likes to say Yeah, and so we will offer a 90 day return policy with the island. So we want to make sure we really want to make sure that the right people find this device. But we also want to make sure that those who just find that the device is not right for them. Find a way to a device that is a loop system or more of a manual system where you get in, you know, you can take more responsibility for insulin dosing.

Scott Benner 37:01
Yeah, that's interesting. I mean, so what's the straight from the listener questions? What's the target a one see gonna be like, what do you expect the eyelet to pull for people?

Ed Damiano 37:12
Well, so our pivotal trial was, by the way, the largest pivotal trial ever conducted for a automated instant delivery system. It was a huge trial, and we enrolled children and adults simultaneously. So we went all the way down to age six, and all the way up to age 83. So we had a very broad range of ages. And if you typically the way you think about, you know, where the agency comes in, as you typically look at adults separately from pediatrics, it's very commonly done. In statistics you hear usually parse it out that way. So we found that the average a one see that the device achieved was about 7.1% In adults, and about 7.5%. In the kids. It's pretty amazing, actually, it's a really good one say, and we did not increase hyperglycemia, relative to the standard of care. And I think it's important to emphasize that the way we designed our trial was to have a standard of care study arm. So not everybody who went into the trial, use the eyelet right away. So what happened was there was a randomization, who you would use your screen to do the trial. And when you were enrolled, you would randomize the either the eyelet, which is called the intervention arm, or the standard of care arm. And by standard of care, we mean whatever your insulin therapy was, when you came into the trial, do that, but do it with a G six Dexcom. Now, if you were, for instance, using a CGM already, then we don't need to bother introducing a G six Dexcom. If you use the Medtronic, then that's your standard of care. You've got CGM, and we give you a blinded G six Dexcom. Because want to capture all the data ng six. If you're using a Eversense, or Liebreich continue doing that, but will give you a blinded G six. And if you didn't use any CGM, we taught you how to use the CGM, if you went into the control arm into the standard of care arm, and they became a CGM user, at least for that 13 week period. So the study cohort divided across these two groups. And because we had a standard of care arm, we could keep track of how well people did in the trial on their own care. And people tend to do better in clinical trials than they do on their own because they're being watched. They're being you interact with them more. It's called the study effect, the Hawthorne effect. And so we want to keep track of that. And whatever the eyelet does, it's really the difference between how much the you subtract out the improvement the standard of care arm saw from the improvement the eyelet saw relative to baseline. And that difference is the difference in the improvement of the eyelet. You can quantify the improvement and what we found was that it was statistically significant reduction in HBA one C of half a percent relative to standard of care. So we saw a point 5% improvement in Me included in a one C relative standard care on the island. And that was a statistically significant difference, which means that the likelihood that happened to chance is exceedingly small.

Scott Benner 39:55
How about if you take I mean, I heard you I heard the pride in your voice from us. said how you chose the people to go through these testings. And I feel like I understand the underpinning of that, which is that some companies pick ringers, like people who they know are gonna do a good job, right? How many times like how much data do you have about people coming in with just wildly out of control? A onesies? elevens twelves? Did they bring them to a seven?

Ed Damiano 40:23
Yeah, so it's an excellent question. So we were very careful not to have an upper limit on HBO and see, and that's unprecedented. There's never been an AI D study, where where there wasn't a limit on upper limit on HBO and see a pivotal trial. So we, you know, for for a market application for a device. And so we were really clear about this, we wanted to make sure that no more than a fifth, we asked the sites to limit those, those people that you randomize such that the limit limit or fill certain buckets, so make sure that at least a third of them have a one C above 8%. And no more than a fifth have an A one C below seven. And that's because these large epidemiological studies out there like the T Wendy exchange, and other studies have shown that on typically in the US, all these studies tend to corroborate that only about one in five people meet the American diabetes Association goal for therapy. Anyone see below seven. Yeah, that just is it just continues to ring true at least adults kids are even worse, unfortunately, having worse outcomes. But adults 18 and older, it's about one in five are achieving goal and 80% aren't. So we wanted to make sure our cohort as much as possible reflected that. So we asked the sites to try to limit the enrollment of Pupil tendency below seven. And to make sure you had at least a third they went above eight, we also wanted to make sure that at least a third of the cohort was on MDI at baseline. Right. So we didn't take pump users, you know, as as as exclusive requirement. We allowed people who on pumps and people who are on hybrid closeup systems to participate in the trial. So it was an FDA cleared device or an FDA approved device, it was admissible into the study. Yeah, I

Scott Benner 41:55
feel that when you mentioned earlier, it struck a chord with me because, you know, I had somebody asked me recently about, like, how do you stay so made motivated about making the podcast and I was like, for all the people I reach it's a very small percentage of people have diabetes. And you know, those other people are not running around with a onesies in the sixes, you know, and they they're overwhelmed. They don't understand what they're doing. They've long past given up and they're just they're on a they're on arrived with their eyes closed, wondering when it's gonna like come to a stop. And

Ed Damiano 42:28
I think the eyelid is for those people, the eyelid is for most of those people, it's not for everybody. And that on one end of the spectrum, right, as I was trying to emphasize the knob Turner's who are going to have anxiety by giving up control and can't get past that is not for them. And there are therapies. Fortunately, we have so many good alternatives. Now, there are therapies for that. But on the other end of the spectrum, you have to at least, you know, you have to attend to what Stephen Russell calls the care and feeding of the device, you have to make sure there's insulin in the cartridge, you have to make sure the CGM is streaming data, you have to make sure the infusion set is intact and working. Right. And you have to make sure the battery's charged. So that is a care and feeding level of responsibility that's essential for the aisle to help you. And they're going to be some people who won't do that either. And

Scott Benner 43:11
and also couldn't for reasons that you can't be pregnant use and I would imagine, because this is

Ed Damiano 43:16
not indicated for pregnancy, we did not test it in pregnancy. So that would have to be done separately is another try. Are there reasons

Scott Benner 43:21
that a doctor couldn't write it off label at some point for somebody under six? Are you going to have to do that testing before that gets okay?

Ed Damiano 43:29
Oh, physicians can write do anything they want with off label usage. They can use these devices, not just hours, but any of these devices off label, we just can't train to that. And we just need to be very clear. What is on label. Yeah. And what is on label is people with type one diabetes who are six and above, okay, who aren't and not pregnancy? So that's certainly not something we have an indication for.

Scott Benner 43:50
So So for clarity like, I can't use islet and achieve a five five a one C with there's no way for me to manipulate it or do that kind of stuff without Lowe's.

Ed Damiano 44:01
Ah, good question. So I noticed one of your one of your, some of your users had some of your listeners had a question similar to that. So what we found is about 46% of our adults had a mean glucose after 13 weeks on the island of about 100, about about 46% had a mean glucose under 154. And an agency of 7% corresponds to mean glucose about 154. So 46% of the cohort had a mean glucose below. Below 154. About 27% of the cohort on the island had an A one C below seven. So almost a third. So what does that mean? What was the lowest day when seeing the island? It was in the fives by the way. So we did have somebody who were those 13 weeks on the island, they ended with an A one C sort of in the mid fives, but it's unusual. The island tries to bring people's mean glucose and anyone see up a little higher if you're sitting down at what I mean glucose at 110 or 120. Right? You're likely going to see it increased toward 130 or 140 or 150. So it is that increase that some of the As folks who enjoy being down there, maybe they pay a price of hypoglycemia, but they want to be down there. Skimming the trees, so to speak, will be frustrated by that rise. But the reality is, all the clinical data suggests that there's no advantage to an agency of five and a half over an agency of six and a half. There's almost no signal for microvascular damage polonium exceeds seven, which is why these, you know, these societies like the Endocrine Society and American diverse decision, have these goals for therapies, goals for therapy.

Scott Benner 45:28
So, nuts and bolts. I want to go over just how it works for a second. So yeah, I'm going to eat a meal. Am I right? Like, I probably should just ask you, but my understanding of it is, and I'm assuming if this is my loose understanding, it's ever about a lot of other people's. I announced the meal by saying This is breakfast, lunch or dinner. And then I say whether this is similar, smaller or larger than I'm accustomed to eating, is that it?

Ed Damiano 45:53
That's it. Okay, so even rolling the tapes back Further still, to start the island on your own day zero, right, you get on the island, you enter your body weight. And that is it, right. So there's no programming of Basal rates, there's no programming of insulin correction factors. There's no programming carbs and some ratios. And there's no carb counting specifically, right, we do ask that you be carb aware. And I'll make a mention of that in a moment. But so to start the system, you enter your body weight, you have to learn how to hook up the infusion set and pair it with the CGM and so forth. But then you enter your body weight, and then you go bionic. And then you swipe to go down again, the system starts dosing every five minutes of every day and adjusts insulin therapy according to your needs to your ever changing insulin needs. But the meal announcement works as you describe almost exactly, to give you a little bit of color under the hood, as to what's actually happening when you do that. So with the meal announcement, you just simply swipe to unlock the device, and you just press on the little knife and fork. There's a little knife and fork here. And you press on that and it asks you, you know, is this you know, what meal type is it and you get to bucket breakfast, lunch or dinner. So given the time of day, I'm going to choose, let's just say, Well, it depends on where you are. Let's just say I choose dinner. And then it asks you is this usual carbs? For me more or less? So three buckets? And no numbers? No, mind you, right? This is diabetes without numbers. As a primary care physician that we've been working with, for years, who was really the one who coined that, and then you just simply, once you say, you know, usual for me, for instance, let's choose usual for me, then you just swipe, and it then determines the dose at that moment, and it begins to deliver. So what happens is it gives a dose of insulin at that moment. So if you have the food delivered, you don't pre meal Bolus, we discourage that, we ask people to wait until the food is in front of you not to worry about fat and protein, right, just focus on the carbohydrates on your plate. And by that I mean is this is this bowl is this is this lump of rice, the usual amount of carbohydrate I'd have for my lunch, say, or my breakfast or my dinner. And it will then on the very first offering of a meal announcement say for your first lunch meal announcement that you issue. It'll give a Bolus at that moment. Once you once you say usual for me lunch, for example. It'll give a Bolus based on your body weight initially, and it'll be quite conservative on that first attempt. And then it will watch every five minutes of the rest of the day, how much you know what your glucose does, and it will add insulin as needed, or suspend insulin as needed. And we have two other controllers that are running separate from the meal announcement controller, the one that gives that Bolus up front one we call the Basal controller or the Basal algorithm. And the other algorithm we call the corrections algorithm. And they're working in concert every five minutes and they adapt on multiple timescales to your changing needs. But the correction algorithm will add insulin above and beyond what the Basal algorithm thinks you need for your Basal requirement. And if it sees the blood sugar starts to rise, even in the in the face of that meal announcement Bolus that was just delivered, the correction algo will add some additional insulin. And at and tomorrow, when you issue another meal announcement for say lunch or usual for me, it will look to see yesterday when you did this, the meal announcement gave three units of insulin and then we added another three units of insulin of correction insulin in the four hours afterwards. And that was not the right balance. It wants the meal announcement to be a majority of your mealtime insulin over the four hours after the meal announcement. And if it was short of that, it'll make it a little bigger. The next day you do it a little bit smaller if it was too much if it was all of the insulin, and then they'll start adapting that and the body weight thing becomes less important. You initialize that with body weight but it's allowed to depart from that very quickly and start adjusting the size of that lunch meal announcement to be to account for most of your for our insulin but not all of it. And it separately adapts the meal announcement for breakfast, separate from lunch separate from dinner it buckets those three and if you have a snack, you know if you have an evening snack you might want to bucket that with dinner if you have a morning snack, you know a little left o'clock ish like Winnie the Pooh, you might call that a breakfast snack.

Scott Benner 50:03
Okay, right? Why doesn't it need a Pre-Bolus? Is it? Because, I mean, I've used a number of different algorithms with my daughter, but most specifically Luke and Omnipod. Five. And they they seem to have in common that once you put in insulin, they take away basil and then work backwards is kind of how I think about it. Does that make sense? To you stay understanding, is the eyelid staying aggressive when the Bolus goes in? Because you my daughter can't eat food without Pre-Bolus? Like whether I did it like so what is it doing? Is it is it matching the power of the rise with insulin and then getting the hell out of there before it causes a low?

Ed Damiano 50:45
Well, yeah, so what it does is it the Basal controller is a controller that adapts on multiple timescales. So let's just focus on that one. First, the basil algorithm, we call it, and it has, you know, it's adjusting sort of an average Basal rate that it figures out by itself over time. And there's an there's a, an ability of the basil algorithm to shut Basal insulin off completely, if you're starting to go low. If you are low, or you're tending low, it can turn the Basal Basal insulin dosing off completely. But it's adjusting this on a very short timescale, looking at your glucose levels, every five minutes, it's it's got to be very responsive, I'm going to turn off Basal insulin if you're dropping too fast, or if you're low, or it can just run along. And it also can see daily patterns. So it also adapts on a diurnal nocturnal timescale of 24 hours. And so we can see that, you know, suppose your child who has growth growth hormone secretion upon the onset of sleep at around 11 o'clock or 12 o'clock at night, and they tend to need more insulin because of that, because the growth hormone causes, you know, release of glucose by the liver. And so the Basal control will start to see that and it'll start to adapt upwards and it might see this pattern that typically around this hour of the day, I need more Basal insulin, it'll just sort of it'll, it'll see that pattern and it'll reinforce it. But if you change as you grow into a young, a young child, and then a teenager, and you start having a cortisol secretion, or just before waking in the dawn hours, you no longer have the growth moment at night. Now that shifts toward your needing more Basal insulin, say it five in the morning, it'll figure that out automatically. And similarly with intercurrent illness. So if you have an upper respiratory virus, and you see a sudden need for more Basal insulin or more correction, insulin for two or three days, it'll see that automatically and we realize that I've got to get more insulin to keep the glucose down at this average that I've been trying to achieve. So I will adapt upwards for that two, or three or four days or a week when you're more insulin resistant. And if you have a vomiting illness, you're very insulin sensitive, it'll do the opposite, it'll back off and become less aggressive. So it's doing the Basal controllers doing that the Basal algorithm and the corrections albums also figuring out your insulin sensitivity, automatically, not so much in terms of the number, what is your insulin sensitivity factor, but rather recognizing that this person over the over the days and weeks, months and years, their insulin resistance might change, they might need more insulin, when your blood sugar hits 250 than it used to when you were six years old, then then you need now when you're 14, and it'll suddenly start adjusting that upwards as well. And you'll get more correction and then on top of it, and it adapts on multiple timescales, not just five minutes in daily timescales, but intermediate timescales as well. And that adapting on multiple timescales allows these two algorithms to learn. It's really a self learning system, and allows that system to engage in what is essentially called lifelong learning. So it does see patterns on a daily basis and is able to adapt to your ever changing insulin needs. Meal announcements adapt according to how you provide input on what is tip usual meal for you breakfast, lunch and dinner. And you're

Scott Benner 53:46
comfortable calling it learning. It's not just going off of what it seen recently, but it's it's remembering stuff from the past.

Ed Damiano 53:54
Yes, it is. And so it is storing information from this past week on where your insulin needs were higher and lower. So it is a kind of an autonomous learning system. I wouldn't call it artificial intelligence. Right? It does. It does do some pattern recognition, though, in the sense that if it sees if it sees, you know that the basil algorithm is giving more insulin at this, you know, early morning hours over and over again, it will see that and it will, it will it will it will tend to be higher in that in that period, unless for some reason in that particular morning, you don't secrete the cortisol and you're more insulin sensitive, it can very quickly turn off the Basal insulin. So it is a learning system in that regard. Yeah, so

Scott Benner 54:32
that brings up a question that a lot of people ask them that. I was wondering just while you're talking us an idea like somebody's getting their period, like so one day like I'll use my daughter because I'm sure one day she'll love to listen back to this podcast and hear her period as much but in the days approaching, Arden can be need more insulin, and then when the event happens, she can fairly suddenly need less, and it changed his dress. So how Otherwise, how does like can I just like whisper in the eyelids here? Like, you know, I got my period or like, like, how does that like you because you can't tell it stuff like that,

Ed Damiano 55:07
you know, you can't tell and stuff like that. And it doesn't have it doesn't have memory over a monthly cycle, right? It's really looking more over the seeing patterns in the past week or so. But just to be clear, the eyelet learns and adapts very, very quickly. So what we found was in the pivotal trial, remember, we start the system with your body weight. So imagine you have a teenager, a raging hormone adolescent who weighs 70 kilos, and uses 90 units of insulin a day, and an adult who weigh 70 kilos, he uses 45, the islet will figure out that difference in about 24 to 48 hours that difference, that's fast, right? That's fast enough to handle the increased insulin demand around periods around intercurrent illness, the physiological changes in insulin demand happen over the space of a day or so it will see that and if you suddenly become very insulin sensitive, like you just described, it can shut Basal insulin off and it won't dose correction and insulin if it doesn't need it. If you're not hypoglycemic. So if it sees you sort of staying low, it'll back off completely on Basal insulin or or shut it down dramatically. So that if you won't go low as easily as you can go high. So it definitely is biased and trying to prevent hypoglycemia. That's like the first order of business is to limit hyperglycemia.

Scott Benner 56:24
How does that work with exercise?

Ed Damiano 56:27
So with exercise, I would like to introduce you to the idea of a by hormonal system. That is, indeed, unequivocally the best way to deal with exercise is that you know, is to be as biomimetic as possible. That is how the pancreas handles exercise. It reduces insulin secretion simultaneously with increasing glucagon secretion. And we really do need a by hormonal system to handle exercise elegantly in type one. All single hormone systems are vulnerable to exercise, even insulin pen therapy, all of it. Yeah. So you have carbohydrates to help and other other tricks to deal with that using carbs, you know, many carbs to treat, or being fasted going into exercise are different ways to deal with people different ideas about that. And many of those tools are going to be used with the single hormone island, but specifically, disconnecting from the device is what we recommend, if you're going to engage in exercise, just this is going to add the infusion set, if you're going to engage in exercise, that where you find yourself going low in on your other therapies, try disconnecting from the eyelet. There's no setting of temporary basals. But if you do have to go beyond that, and say it's not enough just to suspend insulin, I also need to usually take some carbs ahead of exercise, if you're going to carb load like that, to prevent hypose. during workouts, what we ask you to do is to disconnect from the eyelet first and then take the carbohydrates not the other way around. Because if you do the carb loading and forget to disconnect in your workout, it'll see the rise and we'll start dosing just when you don't want it working out. So the order is actually important there. And that's something a little different from traditional pump therapy.

Scott Benner 58:05
Okay. Would you say that the system if it's trying to address a higher blood sugar, for example, does it address it with Basal insulin or with a Bolus?

Ed Damiano 58:14
Yeah, so it has the correct the correction algorithm is responsible for giving insulin above and beyond what the Basal is, sees its responsibility to be the Basal insulin. The Basal insulin algorithm is sort of swimming in its own swim lane. And then you've got the correction algorithm that swims and it's swim lane. And when you start to have hyperglycemia excursions for whatever reason, stress hormones, stress, hormones, stress, you know, whatever is or an illness, or carbohydrates, right if you forget to meal announce or if you meal even if you do meal announcing you tend to see a still arise after that. The Corrections algorithms responsibilities to come in and give that additional insulin above and beyond Basal that handles hyperglycaemic excursions. And if you forgot to meal announced it will provide all of the additional meal insulin, if you will, it doesn't know its meal. Instead, it's just correction insulin needed to bring you back into range. But if you do forget to meal announce, it will step up and do that. What we tell people is that what we've seen is that typically, if you forget to meal announced and you eat a meal and it has the sufficient amount of carbs to cause a glucose excursion, you'll typically you'll likely go higher than you would if you did a meal announcement you'll be higher for longer and there is an increased chance of late postprandial hyperglycemia if you don't do the meal announced because the meal announcement gets the insulin up front, it's always best to get the insulin up front than to wait until you see the rise but it is designed to handle glucose excursions when you know nothing of any sort even those occasions when you forget to meal announce Okay,

Scott Benner 59:40
so here's another idea. What if I'm a very low carb person and I weigh 150 pounds I put on island a family 150 pounds and I'm eating breakfast and it's normal for me. Like but normal is three eggs and two slices of bacon and a half a piece right? What happens then?

Ed Damiano 59:59
Great question. So as I said, with a meal announcement, all we're asking you to do is be what we call carb aware, meaning, you know, know what the difference is between the three macronutrients know what a fat a protein and carbohydrate are, right? You should that's every every, every person should know that whether you have diabetes or not everybody should have that level of nutritional education. So with the eyelet, we expect that level of nutrition education, and we provide educational materials in our training documents to help understand some of the macro nutrition, some basic nutritional guidelines, but essentially, understanding that, you know, if you're eating eating eggs and bacon for your, for your breakfast, and you're having no carbohydrate, there's no meal announcement to be had, it doesn't matter if there's 80 calories on that plate, right, or, you know, whatever your hundreds of calories on that plate, you know, 150 300 500 calories, if there's no carbohydrate, and there's no need for a meal announcement, suppose you're a grazer, and you never have more than, you know what we typically say, for adults, if you're having fewer carbs than just a single slice of bread, then there's no need to meal it out. So that's just a rule of thumb. Again, you'd like to stay with numbers. But for an adult, you might think of, you know, a piece of bread, or anything less than that, you can probably just skip the meal announcement and let the corrections algorithm do the rest. So for small snacks or meals, where you have very low carbohydrate, you wouldn't meal an ounce. Where would

Scott Benner 1:01:17
I expect my blood sugar to go in a scenario like that?

Ed Damiano 1:01:21
Oh, well, I mean, it of course, it varies. But I mean, if you had a very low carbohydrate meal, you know, you could see an excursion, you could see a small excursion to you know, 100 to 200. Meg's per deciliter, and the direction album could kick in, and then bring you back down. If you had a very high carb meal, like suppose you had, you know, 120 grams of carbs, right. If you're a teenager having a big bowl of cereal cereal in the morning, it's not an unreasonable to see her glucose, go to 250 or 300, even with a meal announcement, because it takes time because we do encourage people to do it at the side of the meal, but not before. And by the way, if you forget the meal announcement, and it's been more than 30 minutes, since you started the meal, we asked you not to do a meal announcement, then just let it go, let the corrections do it. But it isn't unreasonable for your glucose to go to 250 or 300. If you have a very large carbohydrate load, even with a meal announcement, but then the correction will kick in and take care of that.

Scott Benner 1:02:17
And I couldn't say have a breakfast that I called normal and then realize like, oh, hell, it was larger than Can I go back and tell it like, hey, you know what that was a large breakfast, or do I

Ed Damiano 1:02:29
know what you would do is the way you would try and deal with that is suppose you have a breakfast, and then you want to have or dinner and a dessert, right or a meal, let's just get it out of the category breakfast is, in general, if you have a meal, and you look at what's in front of you now estimate is this usual, more or less than usual for me. And so in what's in front of you, now, I'm going to clean my plate, I estimate I estimate, I'll clean my plate, let's do usual for me and swipe. And then it'll give that that meal dose and it'll start watching your blood sugar rise. Now let's say 45 minutes later, you're gonna have a dessert and dessert comes and it's got more carbs than the meal. Then you could add right at that moment, you could say more than usual as another because it's like another meal and you can just stack it right on, attach it to that it's not stacking, because you really do need that insulin. So you're attaching an one meal announcement to another and they're separated by say 30 or 45 minutes, whatever it is between the time you get your primary meal, and you get your dessert. So desserts can very often be more than usual. Because they very often are carb rich. So you shouldn't resist you'd still call it so let's say you're having a dinner and you have a usual for me dinner, typical amount of carbs and then the dessert comes in. It's it's you know 50% or 75% more than your carbs and you'd have in there in the in the dinner you just you just swiped for you then swipe for a more than usual dinner as your as your dessert.

Scott Benner 1:03:49
Okay. I'm going to look through a couple of these. These. These questions here? Sure. Do you have an idea of what it would cost out of pocket? Once it's available?

Ed Damiano 1:04:01
Out of Pocket? Are you do you mean with insurance?

Scott Benner 1:04:04
Now if I didn't have insurance, I want to pay cash? Oh, yeah. Do you have? Yeah, I

Ed Damiano 1:04:07
do think yes, you can. You can buy you can buy. We have one of our distributors that allows you to buy direct if you were to do a cash pay. Okay. So yeah, I think it's very, very similar to the price you might pay for an insolent a durable insulin pump. So, you know, several $1,000 is what you'd expect to pay for out of pocket cash pay. And you would purchase that not directly from beta, but one of our, like eight or 10 distributors that we're working with. There'll be one distributor you'd go to to do a cash pay, and there's a special price for that. And you can if you'd like if you're in a warranty and you want to get out, you can do a cash pay. Again, it's important now we do have the 90 day return policy and that's important for people to find out if they can live well with the eyelid or if it's not the right device for them, and it's

Scott Benner 1:04:54
covered by a wide range of of insurances. It is how What kind of uh, hell is that setting up on the business side, people that go out and knock on an insurance company doors and I mean,

Ed Damiano 1:05:05
it's dedicated team, right? First of all, we have a dedicated team and market access team at beta for helping people with reimbursement. But the way we started this is through the what's called the DME channel, the Durable Medical Equipment channel, right. And through the DME channels, you have distributors across the country, and each distributor has set up contracts with all the commercial payers, so they had that there, like a buffer for us. So they'd had all those conversations. And similarly, CMS can go through those distributors as well, once we have our contract our contract with CMS setup. So we will sell through distributors at launch, we do also, we're very interested in getting into the pharmacy channels as well, which we think is in our future. And we have several reasons why we think that makes a lot of sense. And it's best for people with diabetes as well as as providers. But for now, and at launch. It's all through the DMA channel,

Scott Benner 1:05:54
okay. Infusion sets, just what are their options,

Ed Damiano 1:05:59
we have one steel set at launch and one Teflon set, they're both 90 degree six millimeter, and they're made by unit medical. So we are using the unit medical family of infusion sets. So if you're familiar with the terminology, we have the inset one, which is six millimeter 23 inch tubing to the eyelet cartridge, and we have the contact detach, let's put this Teflon set and the contact details for the steel set, which is a 90 degree. You know, I think it's a six millimeter 29 gauge steel set.

Scott Benner 1:06:31
So you said something earlier that it's not leaving my head. So I'm after asked about it. If I sit down at a burger joint, and I have a cheeseburger and french fries. And I go okay, the rolls 30. And I'll even throw in five more for the burger just in case and the fries are 80 carbs. So it's 120 carbs. But I know for certain that 90 minutes from now when my digestion slows down and that fat slows everything down. I'm gonna see a rise up to 220. If I don't Bolus for the fat, how does it deal with that?

Ed Damiano 1:07:04
Right? So you're you're you're invoking this idea of a square wave Bolus or something where it's been a very complicated way, with a traditional pump, you think about saying, well, let's release some of the insulin now. And then later, I want more insulin to come in a second wave. gastric emptying happens over a long period of time, right? Because of the fat and the protein slowing that? Well remember what I said at the beginning, we have two other algorithms besides the meal announcement algorithm that are running every five minutes of every day. It's like a perpetual squarewave Bolus ready to be let loose, if needed, but only if needed. Okay, so it's watching you every five minutes. And suppose what happens is the meal announcement comes in, and some of the carbs are released quickly. And you see this rise in the meal announcement insolence catches up to it, and you start coming down and you dropped to say 170. And now you're at like two hours out, and you're down to 120. And suddenly you start to rise. The Basal control is just chugging away. The Corrections Adams watching it, it's like a hawk every five minutes now suddenly start drifting up to 151 6170. It starts adding insulin saying basil, you're not you This is out of your league. I'm coming in to take over and so the correction element comes in and starts adding insulin without you having to pay attention any of that because it's not your it shouldn't be your job to do that. Is that is that

Scott Benner 1:08:19
stream thinking?

Ed Damiano 1:08:21
They just ate three hours ago. This is probably a reoccurrence or does it not care. It has no opinions. It just it sees no judgments and no opinions. A number and it goes no, no, no. Yeah. All it cares about is your glucose at the moment. And it uses gets past insulin insulin history with you it's learnings from that history and your current glucose level and the amount of insulin that it is that is pending. It's keeping track of all the insulin that's pending every five minutes and updating that itself.

Scott Benner 1:08:48
So if Bolus is the number it sees not a predictive trend, it's not.

Ed Damiano 1:08:54
Yeah, I mean, it's certainly we have we use something called Model Predictive Control. So it does look, it does make an estimate of what the glucose is going to be in five minutes from now the next step, and then it will update its estimate of that at the next step once it sees the real value and compares it to the model. But that's it, it's just a, it's a five minute prediction on what your glucose is going to be. But importantly, it keeps track of the very long horizon into the future of your insulin tail. Because every dose it gives, it keeps track of how long that dose takes to rise and picking your blood which is usually about an hour and six more hours before that insulin I'm giving right now is really got mostly gone. And then five minutes later gives another dose and it's superimposes that insulin rise and fall profile and it has that insulin to look forward to it's what we call pending insulin action. It's accounting for that and predicting what your glucose is going to be in the next five minutes

Scott Benner 1:09:45
when I talked to people in in person when I do in person talks I explained to them about there's different levels of or different lines of insulin happening all the time you put in some here the Basal is hitting peaking and tailing. And then the basil from five minutes later is hit, you can't keep it all straight in your head, right, but so is every Bolus. And if you if you really think about it like that there's, there's these constant pushes. It's right fantastic that an algorithm can like, make quick sense of that.

Ed Damiano 1:10:15
And that's what it's, that's all it does, like, you know, it's really good at this very narrow task, it's much better than we are the vast majority of we write it is much better than that, because it's got one very narrow job, we do many things very, very well. But the vast majority of us can't do what the eyelet can do, because it's its only job, and it's doing it every five minutes, it doesn't have anything to distract it. That's all it really cares about. And so it keeps track of every one of those doses and literally superimposes those doses, one on top of the other to account for how much insulin is trailing off and how much is rising.

Scott Benner 1:10:48
It's got a cartridge, right? And for how much does it hold?

Ed Damiano 1:10:52
It's 180 unit cartridge. And after you prime the tubing, you'll have about 160 units. So we found it lasted about three days in the average adult,

Scott Benner 1:11:02
okay, but if I pop I just get somebody to write me a script for more and so it's I've never right, I'm gonna I'm gonna sound odd for a second. I've never, I've never used the tube pump. So my daughter Okay, and using exclusively Omni pod since she was four. But you just pop out that cartridge, put a new one in prime it and keep going.

Ed Damiano 1:11:19
Correct. So let me tell you two things about that cartridge. One is we have we have two different types of cartridge. One is a patient fillable cartridge. So it's a glass cartridge, 1.8 ML, and you can put human law or Nova log in it through the septum, you just draw it out of a vial like you would with your Omnipod into a syringe and then introduce the syringe needle into the septum of the cartridge which looks just like the septum on your insulin vial. Yeah, and then you introduce the insulin and remove the bubbles and then you load the filled cartridge into the eyelid chamber, quarter turn to have the eyelid connector and tubing to the eyelet. And then it'll prime some of the tubing and then you prime the rest of it and hook it up to your set. The other thing I want to tell you about is that in the pivotal trial, we used human logon Nova log in the adults in the in the randomized control trial. But we also had a cohort of adults use fiasco in a prefilled cartridge that no one artist makes which is identical in shape and size to our patient filled cartridge, or ready to fill cartridge and it's filled in a blister pack, it comes in a blister pack of five cartridges and it's prefilled with the Aspen so that dispenses with the need to transfer insulin from a vial and pull up the air bubble. And that process takes about five minutes or so we eliminate that. So with the prefilled cartridge in the trial, you just pop it out of the blister package, slide it into the chamber quarter turn and you prime the tubing, you can change a cartridge soup to nuts a prefilled cartridge vs cartridge in less than 60 seconds with the out because it's got a very fast motor drive train like the atom is pumped it for those of your listeners who are familiar with that. So we had it we emulate that very fast movement of the rewind and then advancing and priming you can do less than a 62nd change if it's a prefilled cartridge,

Scott Benner 1:13:02
did you notice any better outcomes with fiasco or other insolence?

Ed Damiano 1:13:08
Not much for one thing I'll say is that in almost every every analysis we did it was very similar to human login or login the adults 18 and older. And what we found was that in every way, you know, it had very low levels of hyperglycemia. Like similar to standard of care, like we saw with hemoglobin Novolog. It's mean glucose was very similar. The ANC was similar time and range was similar 71% With vs versus 69% in the adults for hemoglobin Novolog. But we did see a statistically significant improvement in time and range. It improved by 14% relative standard of care relative to human lung Novolog, islet users which saw an 11% improvement in time and range. So that was statistically similar, but it's not sure I'm not sure that's clinically relevant. But it was a little better. And one thing I add to that we didn't tell the islet it was fiasco. Right so we have hard coded in the islet knowledge about insulin kinetics. Now we know that the aspirin the aggregate absorbed more quickly, in most adults, or you know, in the aggregate of a cohort of adults, then he will log on over log and it clears a little faster. So it's a slightly faster drug. And if that information had been provided to the eyelet, we have some pre pivotal studies that showed you might see better glucose control and lower mean glucose higher time and range with the aspirin human log, no log. But we for this study, we talked to the FDA about it. We didn't have enough data to do go into a pivotal trial and adjust the the built in parameters in the device to let it know that fiasco was faster. So it was under the assumption it worked operate under the assumption that it was just like chemo Novolog. And so it didn't get to leverage the faster kinetics. It was in the mathematics that's built into the device in the future. We will visit that possibility. But we didn't see big differences and probably just because we couldn't tell it it was faster Okay.

Scott Benner 1:15:00
If should people hear that those are the only insulins they can use and think that that's the case? Or can they use the I mean, you can't tell them to use it off label, but it's something horrible gonna happen if they put a pager in it or something like that as

Ed Damiano 1:15:14
well, we didn't test it with Piedra, we did test it in adults with jemalloc. No bloggin. fiasco. And one thing I didn't mention is that is that the when people who randomized to the standard of care arm in the pivotal trial for 13 weeks, they kind of drew the short straw. I mean, they want it to be in the trial to test the island, but they ended up randomizing to their own care. So what we did was, those people had the option who randomized Sustainer, care to spend 13 weeks on the island after the study ended. So they could cross over the island. And the vast majority of them did just that. And when the kids crossed over, they all use the Aspen the prefilled cartridge. And we saw very similar results to what we saw with the adults with the ASP. So what we have right now in front of the FDA is an application to get the prefilled vs cartridge approved for use with the eyelet. And that's going through the process right now. So we're hopeful, hopeful that that will that will come through soon. But right and at launch, it's cleared for use of human lot with hemoglobin Oplog in our patient field cartridge,

Scott Benner 1:16:10
right? A couple of ideas around you being a smaller company. So people ask questions, like, you know, there's the diehard on the pod people that are like, Look, if it's got tubing, I don't want it, can they make one without tubing? Can they get it for kids under six? Can they can they can they do you have the bandwidth? Can they can they can they or where are

Ed Damiano 1:16:29
you at? Yeah, I mean, we do have limited bandwidth. But we're very creative about some of the things we can do. Like for instance, because we came from an academic realm, myself and Stephen Russell in, you know, in the early days of the project, we do try and think creatively about ways to bring resources, financial resources into the company to help us do trials that might give us indications for use for other kinds of conditions, right, other kinds of diabetes, you know, and so forth. And different age groups and things like that. So what we have done is we've worked with other investigators who are in academia, like ourselves, and they can put in grant proposals to the Helmsley Charitable Trust the JDRF, the National Institutes of Health, to get funding for studies now dilates, FDA cleared to test it in other indications. And so our hope is that we can work collaboratively with academic institutions and clinical investigators like ourselves to do those studies, instead of it being Stephen and Ed's teams doing those trials, we're now going to work with other investigators like ourselves, to do that in the academic realm. So we can leverage all that financial resource that comes from private foundations and government funding, it doesn't come money that's coming to beta, but then beta doesn't have to spend the money to do those trials. So that's how we hope to get expanded indications. And at this time, at least, and then, you know, as the company gets more resource, then maybe we could do some, some sponsored studies as well. But we're limited in what we can do. Outside of you know, we really want to get the buyer model pivotal trial started, because we're very committed to bringing the buyer model eyelet. Yeah. To people with title,

Scott Benner 1:18:00
I want to get to that. I just, I have a couple more questions first, of course. So I don't know anything about what you did, like, I don't have technical knowledge, did you decide we're gonna shoot for a seven a one C? Or is that what the algorithm is capable of? Like? Were there four dials? You could have turned and you'd be on here telling me oh, it keeps people around to 681. C, and you spike to about 180? Not to like you don't I mean, like, or is that not the case?

Ed Damiano 1:18:26
Yeah. So the way we did this is we started by studying the by hormonal system. And we we chose a glucose target, and aggressiveness factors and things like that initially. And then and we did these studies, first in the inpatient Center at MGH, just with the by hormonal system, once we started human trials, and after a while, we, you know, it became clear to us that with the biochemical system, occasionally the glucagon channel might be might not be available. And so what happens if the glucagon runs out while you're out and about, well, what happens if you have an occlusion or your Google infusion set fails, then if that happens, you know, it needs to sort of fall back safely into an insulin, a single hormone insulin only configuration, and we hadn't really tested what that looks like we weren't back then thinking about making a single hormone islet is a product, right? We were thinking about this being a fallback. And so we started doing studies testing the by hormonal, bionic pancreas against the single hormone bionic pancreas against standard of care. And what we found was the single hormone Bender packers was a very differentiated technology in its own right. It couldn't it but it had had had all of its glucose targets had to go up higher, to be able to get really good glucose control and not have hyperglycemia. And so we started studying different glucose set points for the insulin only system and for the by hormonal system. And with single hormone, we found that you can safely have these targets up here and not have much hypoglycemia. And with the by hormonal ones, we could have safely have these targets down here and still not have hyperglycemia. Because glucagon is helping that. So we could basically have effectively something that could give a little bit more Just went up front a little bit more aggressively, just because the targets are lower that it operates under with the buyer model. And so that's how we came to figuring out what these targets were. So the agency that it gets, or the media glucose that it achieves was really It fell out of the mix, we weren't shooting for a particular target of is it going to be to get 154? We said, What is this system do configured this way with this target? What is the average or cohort will get on the system. And we found out with the single hormone, it was about 155 In adults, and the bimodal and in adults was more like 140. So it's about 15 meg per deciliter improvement by adding the second hormone and being able to use these lower targets with single hormone. As you lower the target every time you lower the target, you see a lowering in the mean glucose but a concomitant increase in time below 54. With the buying hormonal system, we saw as you lowered the target, you saw a progressive improvement or lowering of mean glucose without an increase in hyperglycemia. But with an increase in glucagon usage, okay. So we exchanged hypoglycemia for slightly increased and glucagon infusion. And so we can keep these lower targets safely.

Scott Benner 1:21:11
So when you get to a dual chamber at some point, and you're doing glucagon and insulin, what do you think you'll be back on here telling people about their outcomes?

Ed Damiano 1:21:20
Oh, so what we've seen in the as I mentioned, what we've seen in all of our pre pivotal studies that we published across over the years is a mean glucose. This is about about 15. Meg's per deciliter lower than what we saw with the eyelet pivotal trial, which would correspond to about a half a percent lower a one C one. And as as you may recall, I said about about almost half the people had a mean glucose below and 54. On the single hormone island of the adults, what we see is that about 90% of people on the buy hormonal system have a main glucose below and 50 for adults. So it's a big difference in terms of bringing more people under,

Scott Benner 1:21:58
and it's going to become increasingly unlikely that you experience a low and what are we calling a low, by the way, you said it arranged a couple times is that 71 8070 to 180? is what we're calling in range. Okay. And so that's timing, right? The lowest 69?

Ed Damiano 1:22:13
Oh, no, no. So yes, certainly. That's, that's out of range. So that's below range, right? So we measure two different we keep track of two metrics. In our pivotal trial studies, we had an outcome that looked at how much what percentage of time do you spend 70? And what percentage of time you spent below 54. And the way we powered the study was we said that, you know, we powered the study for statistically for superiority, we expected to see a superior outcome in HBA win see in reduction of HBO and see so we saw a superior we thought we'd have superiority in a one zero standard care, and non inferiority in time below 54. relative standard care. And that's exactly what we found in the trial. Yeah, I feel

Scott Benner 1:22:52
like I haven't, like just expressed enough how pretty amazing it is just the meal announcement portion of it. Like I can't imagine what a what a relief that must be to people. Did you talk to them about that in like exit surveys and

Ed Damiano 1:23:09
things we did? Excellent question. So we had we had focus groups at the end of the trial. So we worked with Joe Weisberg, ventral she's up in Chicago, and she works at the Lurie Children's Hospital. And so she's an expert in psychosocial and behavioral outcomes when it comes to studying diabetes technologies. So she developed, validated, behavioral psychosocial tests questionnaires that we gave throughout the study. And also ran the focus groups at the end for people as they came off the device. So that was qualitative. So we have these quantitative questionnaires. And then we have these qualitative focus groups at the end. So we did get to find out, you know, how people felt about things like diabetes, distress, fear of hyperglycemia, but also just sort of qualitative measures of how how people feel about the eyelet. And I do think you're right about this giving up of carbohydrate counting this diabetes without numbers is really important to people because we're trying to say that we really hope this device is agnostic to levels of literacy and numeracy to levels of to technical acumen to socioeconomic status, race, ethnicity, and so we did a lot of work. In the trial doing subgroup analysis, we published something in the European Journal of Medicine after the main study was published, in a letter to the editor looking at the subgroup analyses to show that the people who needed the most improvement in glucose got it from the eyelet, more so than people who were very close to range. And so it didn't seem to discriminate against people if you're an MDI therapy and never use the pump versus people aren't hybrid closed loop didn't discriminate against people who had never used the CGM versus those who had. What you do see is the people of the highest baseline agencies at at baseline before the study started. So the greatest improvement and you'd mentioned, you know, I imagine you're seeing people with higher agencies than other studies, our highest day when he was 14.9 at baseline, so we brought people in across the mix with you know, hi, when season the double digits

Scott Benner 1:25:04
did that 14 leave at a seven

Ed Damiano 1:25:07
6.80. Wow. So the 14.9 went to 6.8. That is not. That's anecdotal though. That's one data. We had. We had other people at agencies, you know, maybe have nine that dropped eight and a quarter and a half or something like that. So it's not everybody sees that remarkable reduction. But it is noteworthy that some do. Yeah. And again, it's a device with you know, that you initialize with bodyweight and you use meal announcements without counting carbohydrates.

Scott Benner 1:25:33
It's a very small barrier to entry. That's for sure. And I mean, obviously, you're talking about, like data that's at the end, this is the average, but not everybody achieved a seven. But that's still just worth bringing up that there's a 14 that came down that Fars is insane. Yeah. Do you think you'll get in other countries in any time soon? Or is the US? Yeah,

Ed Damiano 1:25:54
I think that it's quite surprising how things have changed through the pandemic. So it used to be that med tech companies would first target Europe, as you probably know, in diabetes, med tech was no no exception to that, where they would start in Europe, they'd get what's called a CE mark, and they'd start distributing in Europe. And then they would work their way into the US with a big pivotal trial, and then they get FDA clearance. We're doing it the other way around. So we got FDA clearance first launched in the US first, the next step for us to come to Europe or other countries owe us will be a CE Mark, what's happened through the pandemic is the CE CE mark process has really changed, it's much longer process it's taking, it's taking a very long time to get regulatory clearance outside of the US now it used to be quite the opposite. So it's certainly something we're going to pursue our goal at beta bionics is to bring this technology to as many people as possible, because it is a device that's made for as many people as possible is literally designed for that, that that kind of uptake in that kind of broad demographic adoption. So we certainly want to get this out to Oh, you owe us to Europe, Middle East, in other countries, other regions. And that will require first to CE mark. So unfortunately, that will take a long time just from a regulatory process. It's certainly more than a year's worth of regulatory review, right? But it's certainly something we're going to be doing.

Scott Benner 1:27:14
I have a fair amount of Canadian listeners that will be mad if I don't just say Canada like out loud. Of

Ed Damiano 1:27:19
course in front, you have to say Canada. Yeah, I mean, they are literally our next door neighbor. So we've got to Canada and Mexico, we've got to get out there right and you mighty mark is the way to start. He

Scott Benner 1:27:27
shouldn't have let all that smoke come down and choke me out or I would have been a little more. A little more feeling about it. Okay, so like I told you before we started recording when I first heard about this, I thought, oh my gosh, this is amazing, right? Like they're gonna have glucagon in the same pump. And you know, it's going to stop you from getting low. I have a couple of quotes. And I'm assuming the the major hold up was liquid stable glucagon, it had to had to exist in the pump for the amount of time at least you were wearing it. So now that exists. And you have access to that great. Does this my first like Boohoo? Like I don't know. Like question is, is glucagon doesn't work if you're drunk. Is that right?

Ed Damiano 1:28:10
No, that isn't right. So we had, we had looked into that specifically. So Stephen Russell did a clinical trial where he actually brought people into the clinical research center at MGH and got him drunk IV though. So we actually got a protocol approved and what he did was he we can infuse alcohol intravenously, and look at the efficacy of glucagon. Okay, Mike would that is microdose not big rescue doses, right? We're giving tiny, tiny doses of glucagon. Okay, I see. All right, and it's not Basal glucagon. It's not like every five minutes, you're gonna get a dose of glucagon. It uses glucagon sparingly and only as needed. But the dose you might get at any step where it sees your blood sugar might be your glucose CGM glucose might be dropping, or if you're already low, that dose could be one to 2% the size of a rescue dose that small, tiny little doses and he gave us doses that were comparable to this to the to the doses we would give in the in the bionic pancreas, the by hormonal bionic pancreas, and at different levels of blood, blood alcohol levels in the in the Clinical Research Center. And he was able to see that there it was, it was pretty much insensitive to the levels, alcohol levels you'd likely see out in the wild. So let's put it that way.

Scott Benner 1:29:20
So a rescue dose of glucagon might be different in that scenario, but the small amounts you were using were working.

Ed Damiano 1:29:26
Yeah, so he didn't test the rescue doses to see if that would be an issue. But definitely that because you know, the doses we're giving are so small, you're not depleting glycogen stores because what glucagon does is it breaks down stored glycogen in the liver, which is a stored form of glucose breaks it down and it liberates glucose into the blood and that's how it raises your blood sugar.

Scott Benner 1:29:43
I I'm asking this question way too ahead of but now we're into it already. So would do you foresee the eyelet being able to rescue if you're not drunk in a rescue situation like if it if it somehow thought this person's going to zero? Would it go for it? or would it?

Ed Damiano 1:30:01
Yeah, it wouldn't release the whole cartridge if that's what you mean, right? It wouldn't do that. And by the way, the amount of glucagon in this little tiny glucagon cartridge is much more than what you'd see in a rescue dose as well. It's a small cartridge, it's only it's only one ml. So it's like, think of a cartridge only 100 units of insulin. That's the size of this cartridge. It's really tiny. But the glucagon we're using made by Zealand Pharma is four times more concentrated and rescue glucagon, okay, it's four Meg's per ml versus one meg Parral ml. So you wouldn't want to ever unload that whole thing. It's really about a seven day supply of glucagon further, by the way, the islet uses it lasts about a week and that little cartridge, but what it would do is it wouldn't wouldn't actually give a rescue dose. But it would continue to give glucagon doses every five minutes if it doesn't see your glucose coming back up. And remember, it also turns insulin off just like the single hormone islet does. Yeah. So it's using both it's using the X gas and accelerator, I like to use that analogy of the insulin is like the gas and the and the brake is the I shouldn't say gassing sorry, should it break an accelerator. The insulin is like the accelerator and the glue guns like the brake. And so you really want to take your foot off the accelerator and hit the brake, if you want to slow down quickly. And with the single the biometric system, you have both at your disposal. Okay. So hopefully, you know, the amount of glucagon that it can give should really prevent any need for rescue glucagon, as long as it's flowing into your, under the skin.

Scott Benner 1:31:22
Is there an amount of time or a number of like, little bumps with glucagon before? Like, doesn't it eventually, like just empty your liver? And then there's just no more there anymore? Right? Yeah. And you're

Ed Damiano 1:31:33
not going to get to a point with environmental system where you get depleted unless you were very sick, right? So suppose you've been you had a vomiting illness and you haven't been getting, getting anything down for a few days, you could get into a situation where you're depleted of glycogen stores, and then there's no substrate upon which glucagon can act if there's no glycogen stores. But that's,

Scott Benner 1:31:53
it's hard to get to that stage. I was gonna say, and in that scenario, doesn't matter how you're managing, you'd probably be in the hospital one way,

Ed Damiano 1:31:58
I think you're going to be finding your way into the hospital in that situation. But what we did see in our, in our pre pivotal studies is that you're, you know, overnight, where you're getting just Basal insulin overnight, so you're not having a ton of insulin, which helps store glycogen. And you're not eating at all, and you've been fasted for a very long time. So you got no carbohydrates for seven or eight or 10 or 12 hours, right? Since you went to school, since you had your dinner went to sleep. When they got up at the morning in the morning at 7am. And they start becoming active and there, they there might start going low, you'd see these little shots of glucagon, tiny little micro doses at 6am and 7am. And it would pop them up. So that meant that even though they've been fasted for 12 hours, they hadn't eaten anything, and they've been getting very low levels of insulin, they still had plenty of glycogen upon which that glucagon could act, okay. And so we never saw any depletion of glycogen storage, any any evidence of that in any of the trials we did, and sort of routine day to day basis, but we've never studied, you know, pushing it to the limit to see how many days could you go fasting, before you'd run out of storage? I don't know.

Scott Benner 1:33:00
I just imagine that most people I try hard. But I imagine most people think that rescue glucagon is like sugar that brings up your blood sugar, and they don't recognize that it actually signals your liver, you know, etc, and so on. Like, I don't know how well that's understood.

Ed Damiano 1:33:16
I mean, if it were up to me, I would if it worked, which it wouldn't, I would rather push sugar than glucagon because it doesn't have to rely on that secondary source of sugar. Yeah, liver that could be depleted when you're sick. But there's no way to infuse tiny amounts of sugar under the skin and have it do anything, it's we really we do use the hormone just the way the pancreas does. That's how the Packers prevents hyperglycemia your first line of defense, people without type one, their first line of defense against hyperglycemia is glucagon. And it's it's, you know, we should not have the hubris to think that we can build a truly biomimetic closed loop system without adding glucagon back because people with type one diabetes lose their ability to use glucagon effectively. So when the when the autoimmune attack takes out the beta cells that secrete insulin, it disrupts the alpha cells ability to release glucagon, they still make look and they just don't release it in any coordinated and useful way anymore. So they really have a dual hormone insufficiency. And that should never be ignored. And so that's one of the things we do with beta bionics is not ignore that, right, we build an entire technology platform that will look just like this one, right? It won't be any bigger. It'll have, you know, we have we built a second chamber here to take a glucagon chamber. And this is actually the exact same platform that we'll be we'll be testing in the pivotal trial with two hormones system,

Scott Benner 1:34:30
when is that going to happen?

Ed Damiano 1:34:32
So our goal is to have that start by the end of the year. 2023. Yeah, so we want to have that trial start by the end of the year. Now that's that's that trial is is huge. So as I mentioned, the single hormone study the biochemical pivotal trial, the bionic pancreas, overdrive with a single hormone device was the largest automated insulin delivery randomized controlled trial ever done. Right. by a longshot. The by hormonal pivotal trial will be way larger, in fact, eight times larger in terms of the number of Patient years of exposure. So it won't be a three month trial, it'll be a 12 month trial, it won't involve 440 people. it'll involve over 700 people. And we're going to have phases. So if we start by the end of this year, the first phase will be a small cohort of 70 or so people. And they'll engage in a crossover trial with the final buy hormonal device, and the single hormone device that you see here. And people will use both and a crossover design. So they'll spend like four to six weeks in the in the single hormone, Iowa and four to six weeks in the biomedical crossover in random order. Once that study is done, that'll take about six months or so we read out the data. And if everything looks good, and we like the way the system is performing, we lock in and we start the big one year randomized trial. And a one year trial doesn't take one year to do. Because we have 700 people and 30 clinical sites, we have 16 sites and the other trial 30 sites or so it takes a half a year just to load everybody into the trial 700 people and then a year for the last person in to finish, that's an 18 month commitment. So it's a long road, right? It's going to be a couple of years, two and a half years just to get to the last participant last visit of the buyer model trial. And then you have to build the FDA package, submit that and they have to review not just the by hormonal island. But here's the big sort of the long pole in the tent, they also have to review the glucagon glucans never been used chronically, it's only used as a rescue. And so Zealand pharma will have to put in their own application for dasi, glucagon, as they call it, their analog of human glucagon, which is a, you know, a 12 month typically a 12 month review process with the FDA that will go in parallel with our buyer model Island.

Scott Benner 1:36:34
Did they have to wait for this first eyelid to be approved to do that? No, it's just no time? No,

Ed Damiano 1:36:40
no, it's just that we were just, you know, we couldn't do too many things at once.

Scott Benner 1:36:44
Is there anything about any patents you hold that would stop an insulin pump company from going to a duel hormone? Or?

Ed Damiano 1:36:52
You know, we have we have intellectual property portfolio that I think is pretty robust, not just in terms of the by hormonal, but also the single hormone algorithms. So yeah, I think that our on our algorithms side, we have some IP out there on bio hormonal, that's pretty robust. But ultimately, you know, we're not engaging in an exclusive relationship with sealant Pharma. So if somebody wanted to build a dual chamber system, you know, they'd have to sort of work around our IP and build their own algorithms. And they'd have to work with Zeeland pharma to figure out how they're going to use their drug. But it is true that if we do the pivotal trial with the Zealand pharma forming per ml concentration drug, that particular very specific formulation and get FDA approval of that any other pump company that builds a dual chamber system would not have to do as long a study with the Zealand pharma for a per ml formulation, right? Because it's been proven out to work in chronic use this way. So is this going to be two different infusion sets? Well, in the trial, it will be but ultimately, that's not our intent for the commercial product. So we can start the trial and do the pivotal trial with two separate sets. And all of our pre pivotal psychology studies use two separate sets. And they're both unit medical infusion sets one was an insulin and one was a glucagon and we put them right next to each other, they're about a centimeter apart. What will will ultimately want to do is build a single set that has, you know, a couple of cannula in it, you'd insert that and one go every like three days or so. But you will have two separate tubes that you could sort of tie together like speaker wire here like at the headphone jack wire. And the reason it's important that you have the two separate tubes is because the insulin cartridge might last three days on average, and the average adult say and the glucagon cartridge might last a week, they're not going to be changed on the same frequency. There's no reason to change them both out if one is still has a few days left in the cartridge. Oh, that

Scott Benner 1:38:40
makes sense. Yeah, I was just trying to like, like I always have, people always ask me for years. When is they always say they when are they going to put them on one device? And like, I don't know what you're thinking about like you want like a CGM and a pump in the same like structure, which I'm like, That can't happen like forget business. Like Like, like functionally it can happen. Right? Well,

Ed Damiano 1:39:04
the thing about it is that with Transcutaneous, CGM sensors, right, they typically are lasting 10 to 14 days, right. And we now have infusion sets out there that are FDA approved to be used for up to seven days. But they don't, on average, last seven days, that's what they can be used up to. But on average, they last shorter than that. Well, why is that? Well, mainly what fails with infusion sets very often as the adhesive fails. And you know, when you are infusing liquid you know insulin under the skin, that he's if you're and you have a tube that's connected to it as you move around that tube is putting a little bit of stress on the infusion set all day long every time you twist and turn and it's tugging on that set. And so the adhesive ultimately is overwhelmed. And after three four days, some people can run it out longer but other people can't and it depends on the to how the adhesive works with your skin and so forth. But generally Do you want someone who uses an infusion set for four or five days, we'll start to see if they go well beyond its intended use, we'll start to see the set fail. And what happens is the insulin starts flowing up around the cannula and wets the skin and doesn't go into the body. Yeah, but, but if you look at a sensor, you put a sensor in, and it's not nearly as much stress and pulling on it, there's nothing connected to it, right your shirt to touches it, but you're not pulling on it with a tube every now and again. And that adhesive can really last longer, and it's more forgiving the sensor under the skin, if it moves a little bit around relative to the tissue versus a cannula where insulin can then leak out. So they just they have very inherently different life's life scale, lifetime, you know, or characteristic time. So make and stay under the skin.

Scott Benner 1:40:42
I wish people could have seen you because I enjoyed watching the the engineer and you know, like, like the face up. Because I always think that when I always think like simple things, like, first of all, what do you like, you're gonna build us like, on the PA that has a Dexcom in it like that, how's that gonna happen? And what happens if your sensor goes bad in three days, but your pumps work or two days, but your pumps working for like, you want to rip the whole thing off? Okay, you understand the desire. But it's always I always feel like that question is asked by somebody who's never built anything before in their whole life. And, you know, yeah,

Ed Damiano 1:41:13
there's just inherently different sort of lifelines, or whatever you would say that sort of the lifetime expectancy of those two systems are so inherently different, and you don't want them to be coupled. Because you as you just said, you don't want to have to change all three, because only one fail right

Scott Benner 1:41:29
right now. Okay. All right. So I've had you for a long time longer than I promised. I have one question. And then I'm going to ask you, if there's anything we haven't talked about, a number of people asked me, islet how like, you know, 40 carbs of I don't know, a soft pretzel, and 40 carbs of cotton candy, 40 and 40. But significantly different impacts, it doesn't matter to the

Ed Damiano 1:41:54
eyelet. No, it really doesn't. Because as I mentioned before, it's because the corrections algorithm is always running in the background. So suppose you have what you're really getting at, I think is a food that's got a very high glycemic index versus one that's got a very low glycemic index and takes longer to raise your blood sugar. Or it's just more muted, right, you just don't grow up as much. It's just it's just, it's just extended out to over a longer period of time. So the island is watching every five minutes. And it has unlike, you know, most hybrid close up systems, it has the occasion, or the opportunity to dose every five minutes if it needs to, so it's always on top of it. So if you have something if you do the meal announcement for that 40 grams of cotton candy, you're gonna see a very fast rise. And the meal announcements going to kick in. And the the it's going to keep track, the islet keeps track of the insulin in that meal announcement dose that it just gave, and it watches the glucose rise, and it says, Okay, if you've got all this insulin pending, I'm keeping track of its rise and its clearance and I'm watching your glucose rise. Now if you rise very quickly, it might just stay in the background for a while there will come a point where I'll say I'm gonna add a little bit more correction insulin now because the correction algorithm has been quiet. But now I think you've risen high enough that the meal announcement insulin even insulates. Pending from that meal announcement isn't enough. So I'm going to add a little bit more, and then it's going to walk it's going to keep watching. And it's very patient because it's keeping track of the insulin it just added, in addition to the meal announcement insulin, and then it'll see it crest if it's a very high glycemic index food, it's just going to rise quickly and and stop and then start coming down. And it'll see it come down, it'll just back off your blood sugar, it could be 252 20. If it sees it slow down, it's going to back off, it doesn't care that you will hyperglycaemic It knows that insulin is coming, it's gonna be patient. And now what if instead, you didn't rise nearly as much, because it's a slow a low glycemic index food. Now you went up to 190 or 220, instead of 250 or 260. And it sees that meal announcements enough, it's really enough, I'm gonna stay back, I'm gonna stay quiet. And now an hour has gone by and you're sort of sit there and now you're, you're coming down to 170. And it's an hour and a half after the meal announcement. But you're still a little bit, you're still a little bit stubborn. And then it's gonna say, well, that meal announcements getting old now. And I'm the correction algorithm checking in every five minutes, I've decided at this step. Finally, that meal announcements not enough given that you're 170, I'm going to start adding a correction insulin now. And so it's very patient and looking at the meal announcement doses and how much your glycemic excursion has risen and how much it's coming. It's responding to that before it weighs in on adding more, but it's always there to add it if it needs to. And it's using very precise mathematics to make that very objective decision. It's it doesn't get it's not irrational, and it doesn't reach Bolus. But it does ask that you the user be patient. And what that usually means is don't keep looking at the iLet and expect magical results and say, oh my god, I'm still 170 Just let it do its thing and that is the ultimately the message that we want to convey to people who use the iOS is let it let it work. Don't Don't fuss over it too much. Just make sure you maintain the character Feeding have it. But let it do its thing and don't try and meddle with it too much. Because you know, it won't help. It doesn't it doesn't get better glucose control, just because you're watching it. And it doesn't get worse glucose control. If you don't watch it. That's another thing we learned from the pivotal trial, you don't have to look at it all the time to get the same equally good control. And you know, with other diabetes therapies, right? We know that the more you interact with a fingerstick meter, the more you interact with your CGM, or an insulin pen, or a pump or hybrid close up system. The the better your glucose control typically is if you look at a group of people interact frequently with their, you know, diabetes therapy, or diagnostic work or another group of people who interact infrequently with it. Those who interact frequently tend to do better statistically, we don't see that with the island, we see that it's pretty agnostic to how much you engage with the device as long as you're taking care of it. And that's, that's a really, I think, a really important point to remember. No, it's a bonus for sure. And the other thing, the other thing I'd like to just was sent heavy. No, go ahead. No, no, I

Scott Benner 1:46:03
was pleased. You're fine. I'm I'm trying to wrap you up. If you want to keep talking. I'm happy for you to keep talking. I just tried to help you out of this.

Ed Damiano 1:46:10
Oh, yeah, very good. I do. I do have a call coming up in a few minutes. But I would say this that what is unique here with the there's a number of things about the AI that I think that are unique, right? It's unique in several ways. But importantly, it determines 100% of every therapeutic dose of insulin. And there's that it's not a system that where you can go and override the dose, you can't add a correction insulin Bolus, you can't add a meal dose, you can't say I didn't give myself enough insulin. So I'm going to add 20 grams of carbs. And it's going to then figure out what to dose which is what a lot of people do in some of these systems. It determines 100% of every therapeutic dose, and you don't override that and your physician doesn't override that. So that is that is not a hybrid system, the hybrid system inherently means that you are playing a role in insulin dosing decision, you and your physician as well as the audit some automation. That is not what's going on here. And as a result of that, you have to really get comfortable with this new world of fully automated insulin dosing decision making, right? That's being added to a device,

Scott Benner 1:47:10
I have to say, I'm actually impressed. And I think it's smart that you're talking about it so directly. Like you're not doing any like marketing, like talking around, you're like, look, this is what it does. If that's good for you, then great. And if not, was nice talking to you. Like I think that's terrific. I don't see enough of that. I've been very impressed with that the entire time you've been going over this. So I really do appreciate, do you think there's anything we didn't talk about that we should have?

Ed Damiano 1:47:38
Not really, I mean, I guess it's more more re emphasizing this idea that the reason I think we can talk so frankly, about is first of all, we want to build technology that's in the best interest of people with type one, we've always been committed to that. And that means that you know, the eyelid, I think is that device that is very complimentary to some of the high tech out there that does serve the interests of the needs of those people who are already in good control, or who have the best had the access to the best resources, the best health care. And, you know, and so we're trying to, to address that other segment, which I think so happens to be the majority of people with type one who don't have all the resources and all the access to the best health care, you realize that you know, 75% of us counties do not have a single endocrinologist in their borders, right. This is something that the Ozeri has published a few years ago. And nightly, whereas 95% of people go counties in the US. So 75% of counties don't even have one endo 95% of counties have at least one primary care physician. Primary care physicians can't use that high tech, it's just it's anathema to them. I mean, they don't have, they don't have the resources, they don't have the staff, they don't have the training, they can't use that tech. But we think the eyelid is a device, a very high tech device that is really the first device that plays very well in primary care, because it is for that large 80% of people who aren't meeting goal. And I do think for those who are meeting goal, many of them will still prefer the island, because they're going to be unburdened of a lot of that cognitive effort and into the vet burden that goes along with constantly being all over your diabetes management all the time. And there'll be others in that same group who just you know, are just too anxious to give that control up. So it's really all about finding those people that that are going to benefit from it and who, who will be able to do that comfortably. And I think he's just a lot of people out there that that we're trying to serve.

Scott Benner 1:49:39
Will you be adding salespeople? I mean, it's because it feels like you're going to have to go to non traditional doctors to talk. Yeah, you know,

Ed Damiano 1:49:48
yeah, we have so we have a very small group at start. And so we've got about 16 people on the sales team right now who are focused in those eight territories I was telling you about and what what we've been doing these past couple of months, Stephen Russell and I I've been going to all those territories with each of the two sale the two commercial people in each of those regions, and meeting with the clinical sites that we targeted in those regions to launch the product. And spending a few hours with each of those clinic clinical teams, and with our commercial team with us, at each of those sites, so that they get introduced to these folks that we've been working with for years, frankly, are as many of them. And so that's how we're doing it at first is we're sort of introducing the commercial team, to the people we've worked with over the years in the clinical setting the clinical research setting, and ourselves being introduced to the clinical people who aren't doing clinical research, but who worked with our clinical research scientists, collaborators. So that introduction is happening. And that's where we're focusing the launch. And then as we get experience in those eight territories in the fall, then we expand more territory, more territory. So we've been doing a lot of traveling, getting on the road and seeing a lot of these sites and moving back and forth across the country, you know, 17 sites in the past nine months, nine weeks.

Scott Benner 1:50:53
It's amazing, busy pace, because you're gonna go to the trouble of I mean, listen to this story, how long it took to make this thing. And now it's the last piece right? Like, how do you how do you set it in someone's hand? And it's not apples to apples, but I'm a person who's trying to deliver something to people too. And you would never know it? If I wouldn't say it out loud. But that's the hardest part of this job. It's making the thing is great. And then giving it to somebody is it's the hard part, you know?

Ed Damiano 1:51:20
Yeah. And that's it's all about scalability. So I'll leave you with this. This notion, if you think about what the diabetes control complications trial did between 1983 and 1993, was to test the hypothesis, right? This was a landmark study, many clinical sites across the country took 1500 people and randomized about half of them into conventional therapy, they called it which was not multiple shots a day, or insulin pump therapy was just one or two shots a day. And that and or intensive therapy where they were checking their blood sugar seven times a day, but importantly, they were giving multiple shots many times a day or using a pump. And what they found was they could dramatically reduce me mean glucose and HPA when see in the intensive therapy group and sustain that for a period of you know, six and a half years on average for each person at a huge effort on the part of the patients who randomized to intensive therapy, and the physicians that supported them, the clinicians that supported them. And they were testing the hypothesis back then it wasn't known that good glycemic control was necessary to stave off long term complications of diabetes. That was that was a contested point back in the early 80s. And until we had the HBA when C test, and insulin pump therapy and fingerstick meters, we couldn't really test the hypothesis. You know, if people take a bunch of people and control their glucose, well, do they have fewer long term complications and those who you don't. And resoundingly, the DCCT, the diabetes control and complications trial showed us it by 1993, that huge, markedly reduce long term complications. And that study took about 10 years to do. And 30 years ago, this month, it was read out to the diabetes community that you got to do this. Well, you know, 10 years after that study, we started building the bionic pancreas. And in that 10 year period, and we've been doing it for 20 years, but in this period after the DCCT, what we also found is it's not scalable, you can't do what the DCCT did in a large scale everybody's anyone see is more like in the eights low eights, not seven, which is what they're able to do with the DCCT. So it wasn't for 30 years after the DCCT that there's a device now that we think and reach broadly, a much larger audience than than most diabetes tech people with type one, that is something you can put in your pocket and you type in your body weight and do these few meal announcements a day and keep it going and get glucose control that's comparable to what the DCCT achieved in the intensive group. And so we sort of answered the question, is there a scalable solution here? And I think the eyelid is that is that device now

Scott Benner 1:53:41
it sounds like it. I mean, I've really appreciated you telling me so much about it, but I'm excited for you to to get it going and get it out there. How long do you think it'll be? It's June till I see somebody online going. I use an eyelet. Online Yeah, like sighs thanks a picture on their Instagram. Like when am I going to see that? Like,

Ed Damiano 1:54:01
in a month, really less than I think in a month? Okay. I think we'll have one or two people at the ADA conference next week on the island. Okay. But on Instagram, I think, you know, on social media, I think you'll see something come up within the next

Scott Benner 1:54:11
month. Pretty amazing. Okay, Ed, thank you so much. I really appreciate Of course, Scott.

Ed Damiano 1:54:15
Thanks for having me.

Scott Benner 1:54:26
Hey, huge thanks to Ed for coming on the show today and telling us all about eyelet. I also want to thank us med for sponsoring this episode of The Juicebox Podcast. I'll remind you to go to us med.com forward slash juice box or call 888-721-1514 To get your free benefits check so you can get started with us med check out that private Facebook group Juicebox Podcast, type one diabetes on Facebook. It's absolutely free. It's for everybody. I don't care what kind of diabetes you have. I don't care how you eat. There's a beautiful community there with over are 40,000 people in it waiting for you? This podcast is sponsored every week buy great companies. I'll list them in a moment. But if you have the need or the interest, please use my links. When you're finding out more, it really does help to support the podcast. If you want to check out the Omni pod Dexcom us med that contour next gen blood glucose meter Chivo hypo pen, athletic greens, cozy Earth BetterHelp touched by type one, they're all there. Just look in the show notes of the audio app you're listening in now or go to juicebox podcast.com. When you click on those links, you're supporting the production of this podcast and keeping it free. The podcast is sponsored today by better help. Better help is the world's largest therapy service and is 100% online. With better help, you can tap into a network of over 25,000 licensed and experienced therapists who can help you with a wide range of issues. Better help.com forward slash juicebox. To get started, you just answer a few questions about your needs and preferences in therapy. That way BetterHelp can match you with the right therapist from their network. And when you use my link, you'll save 10% On your first month of therapy. You can message your therapist at any time and schedule live sessions when it's convenient for you. Talk to them however you feel comfortable text chat phone or video call. If your therapist isn't the right fit for any reason at all. You can switch to a new therapist at no additional charge. And the best part for me is that with better help you get the same professionalism and quality you expect from in office therapy. But with a therapist who is custom picked for you, and you're gonna get more scheduling flexibility, and a more affordable price. I myself have just begun using BetterHelp betterhelp.com forward slash juice box that's better help h e l p.com. Forward slash juice box save 10% On your first month of therapy. Thank you so much for listening. I'll be back very soon with another episode of The Juicebox Podcast


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#927 Omnipod 5 is a Great Teammate

Scott Benner

Carries child has type 1 diabetes and she is here to talk about Omnipod 5.

You can always listen to the Juicebox Podcast here but the cool kids use: Apple Podcasts/iOS - Spotify - Amazon MusicGoogle Play/Android - iHeart Radio -  Radio PublicAmazon Alexa or wherever they get audio.

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DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.

Scott Benner 0:00
Hello friends, and welcome to episode 927 of the Juicebox Podcast.

Today I'm going to be speaking with Carrie. She's the mother of a child with type one diabetes, who is using Omni pod five and we're going to talk all about it. While you're listening. Please remember that nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice, medical or otherwise, always consult a physician before making any changes to your health care plan, or becoming bold with insulin. Are you looking for super comfy sheets, joggers and towels, check out cozy earth.com and use the offer code juice box at checkout to save 35% off your entire order. If you want to take the same green drink that I do every morning, ag one from athletic greens, use my link athletic greens.com forward slash juice box you will get five free travel packs and a year supply of vitamin D with your first order. And don't forget if you're looking for those diabetes pro tip episodes, they begin at episode 210 In your podcast player, if you're having trouble finding them, check out juicebox podcast.com or the feature tab in the private Facebook group Juicebox Podcast type one diabetes

this show is sponsored today by the glucagon that my daughter carries G voc hypo Penn Find out more at G voc glucagon.com. Forward slash Juicebox Podcast is sponsored today by better help better help is the world's largest therapy service and is 100% online. With better help you can tap into a network of over 25,000 licensed and experienced therapist who can help you with a wide range of issues. Better help.com forward slash juicebox. To get started, you just answer a few questions about your needs and preferences in therapy that way better help can match you with the right therapist from their network. And when you use my link, you'll save 10% On your first month of therapy.

Carrie 2:19
My name is Carrie. I'm the mother of a six year old type one boy named Danny.

Scott Benner 2:26
Danny is six. How long has he had type one.

Carrie 2:30
We just had our one year on October 23 diagnosis five he was diagnosed when he was five.

Scott Benner 2:36
And what I what I will do here to try to get around my poor pronunciation is I write down the word carry with a why like carry the weight

Carrie 2:46
as opposed to carry Fisher

Scott Benner 2:49
or no as opposed to like my I might hit the are too hard. And say carry if I'm not careful. You just I just looked at my brain doesn't work around words that well. So this is what I have to do. are you pressuring me already? I don't I don't do this. It's Friday, you know? Okay, so tell me a little bit about Danny's diagnosis. He's a year ago. Do you have any other type one in your family autoimmune? Was there any reason to think this was gonna happen?

Carrie 3:24
Me and stuff on my husband's side not with my husband.

Scott Benner 3:29
There was I thought the result pregnant pause but you were just gone for a second. So can you start off?

Carrie 3:35
Sure. So no diabetes in our family. My husband's side has some non type one autoimmune stuff. Hashimotos celiacs lupus, but nothing. I mean, this was not on our radar, like not even a little bit. Right. So this

Scott Benner 3:54
is your husband's fault. I got all my husband's fault. Yeah. What else does he do wrong?

Carrie 4:01
We're gonna have to do a whole nother hour on that.

Scott Benner 4:04
All right, well, it's not let's pin the poor guy down now. So this is not something you're not sitting around thinking like, Oh, everybody in our family gets type one. So this is definitely gonna happen. So then how do you figure it out?

Carrie 4:17
So we noticed he was paying a lot. And we noticed it mostly at night. We both work full time. He's at school all day. We didn't have a lot of observational touchpoints during the day. But at night it was just he was soaking through the bed kind of multiple times a night but he was he was otherwise totally normal, fine and healthy. Because it was the end of October. We know people on Facebook and such that have type one in their families and they were raising money for JDRF which the walk in our area happens at the at the end of October and I had donated and sort of the social media algorithms. Were putting diabetes stuff on my phone as I was like scrolling through. And about five days after we noticed he was peeing a lot. I texted my husband and I was like, you don't think he's diabetic or something, do you? Because Facebook does, right? Because I've now diagnosed him. And my husband texted back, and he's like, I don't know, is, is peeing a diabetic thing. And I was like, well, apparently. And it kind of got, we're not once we focused on it, we got increasingly more concerned. And the next day, I reached out to one of these acquaintances that has a has a son with type one, and asked her if she would test his blood sugar.

Scott Benner 5:46
Well, that's how you figure it out. So the algorithm, the Facebook algorithm finally did something, right. Correct. It just kept so so seriously, like, the the idea of diabetes just kind of get kept being foisted on you by an algorithm? And that, that that really made you think about it.

Carrie 6:03
Yeah, I mean, it was late at night, he was in the other room changing Danny sheets and getting him back to bed for like, you know, what felt like the millionth time that we? And also I should say, I mean, we have, we have three little boys. So there's lots of reasons that one of my kids could be peeing a lot or peeing a lot at night. I mean, the weather was changing, it was getting cold, or, you know, you sort of rationalize it. 100 different ways.

Scott Benner 6:27
You know, how people pee the bed when it's cold out? Little boys? Do they really? Yeah.

Carrie 6:37
Like when, like when the air conditioning is on, like, there's definitely an uptick in our house and like nighttime accidents, for sure. I'm gonna

Scott Benner 6:44
say that's because those kids don't want to get out of bed and get cold in the bathroom. And they're just, you know, it'd be easier. This piece right here. Yeah.

Carrie 6:54
Yeah. So, so we, we suspected it, honestly, I thought it was going to be like, fingerprick rule it out. I didn't seriously think he had diabetes. They, you know, our friend tested him on there. They have a contour. They tested him. And they saw the reading as high which of course, I didn't know what that meant. And they just looked at me and they said, You need to go to the emergency room tonight. And I said, Well, you know, our doctors open on Sunday, let's just be you know, I'm sure it's okay. He seems fine. And they were like, no, no, now, like, leave your other children and go

Scott Benner 7:33
abandoned the other kids. Just go? Did they explain DK to you.

Carrie 7:39
So she did not explain DK to me. She said to me, when you get to the emergency room, tell them you think he's in DKA. And you will cut the line.

Scott Benner 7:48
Okay. And that works? Well, finally, just the worst way to get the front of the line you don't want to be in? Alright. Can I ask for a second? Have you and your friend never gone back over that moment? Was it hard for them to tell you that?

Carrie 8:04
Um, we haven't talked about I mean, that at the time, she was, you know, the mother of another kid in the class of one of my other kids, she we didn't know each other. Well, we've become obviously much closer over the year she has given us you know, some some wonderful advice and things like that. But we we haven't really talked about it other than just sort of how crazy the world works sometimes. Right that, you know, she she had been posting I donated we we connected like I thought to call her it all just sort of, you know, the universe does funny things sometimes. So

Scott Benner 8:44
sucks. Doesn't it be an adult? It's all I could think when you were talking about texting with your husband. Like, none of us are like 20 years old at a concert and thinking like, you know what'll probably happen one day, I'll probably be texting a man I haven't met yet who will be in the other room of my house, telling him how one of our children probably has diabetes. It sucks like that? Yeah. Yes.

Carrie 9:05
Being an adult sucks. Being an adult with a kid who has type one has sucked more than I thought being an adult could be.

Scott Benner 9:14
Well, I agree. I'm right there with you. Okay, so you get to the hospital D cut the line.

Carrie 9:21
We went in pretty quickly. You know, my son at that point, was absolutely hysterical. I mean, from his perspective, he was basically pulled off a little league field and someone stuck a needle in his finger and now we're at the hospital and he was screaming his head off. Screaming at the nurses, you're not going to take my blood, you're not taking my blood and the nurse looked at me she's like, you know, we're gonna take his blood, right? I was like, I know it's okay. And so they they fingerprint him in the ER and it was like 663 or something like that. And right then we were, you know, moved into the back room. Men and kind of off to the races with a diagnosis.

Scott Benner 10:03
What position does he play? He's six. Oh, they just shut him out on the field

Carrie 10:09
right there like right side or left side close or far. Do you want to

Scott Benner 10:13
run far this time this evening? Or do you want to run a little bit? All right,

Carrie 10:16
I think I think they have like pitchers helpers, the position that everyone wants to be

Scott Benner 10:21
standing next to the coach. Yeah, exactly. That's what kids want to do. They want to be the pitchers helper.

Carrie 10:27
Well, because that's like the kids can't really hit the ball. So straight up the middle kind of ball

Scott Benner 10:33
goes. Yeah. So your kids suck. i My kids were great when they were just kidding. That's exactly what happens to it's like the was T

Carrie 10:44
ball. Like they weren't even there wasn't even any velocity on the pitch to help them.

Scott Benner 10:49
I understand. I'm kidding. No, that's the at that age. That's the only position where you get the feel the ball. Yep, yeah, it's pretty. And then everybody else who stands out there going, is that

Carrie 11:00
baseball really fun, really exciting.

Scott Benner 11:02
I watched I'll never I don't think I'll ever forget. I don't know the kid. And I have no idea what his name is, or you know where he is now. But around that, like eight year old time, was the time when they would give the young kids one nighttime game at our little league field so that they could come at night and play under the lights and everything. And it brought out into the middle of summer. And it brought out these weird moths. I don't know. Like they were just big and weird. And one landed in right field. And the kid just walked over to it. And He squatted down. I mean, the game is happening. You understand? You know, it's it's not like in between the batter or anything. He squats down. He's poking at it. He picks it up. He's got it on his hand. He's got it up in his hand. Now he's examining it in his face. And I'm like, I don't like this kid is long for baseball, you know? And sure enough, he was he left pretty quickly after that. But I mean, that was that kind of encapsulates what happens when the ball can't go past the pitcher's mound. Everybody else is just in a coma. So it's fun when they get bigger. Do you think we'll keep playing?

Carrie 12:06
He's pretty all in on soccer. love soccer. That's good at soccer. I'm not sure he has the attention span for baseball, but but we'll see. You never know. He's only six I don't have to plan is his professional sports career just yet.

Scott Benner 12:21
I am going to give you one great piece of advice. Okay. We'll move past this. This is for everyone. Listen, it's the best piece of advice you're ever gonna get about sports and kids. Hope that your children are good enough to play and have fun, but not good enough to dream about more. I'm telling you, that's the best advice you're ever gonna get. Right there just like that. Yes, because none of your kids are going to end up being 662 140 pounds and stay athletic. Like that's a random thing that happens to a random person. And you can be really good at something and, and still not fit the mold. And it's a lot of time and effort to put into something. So anyway, that's my best advice. It was given to me by a friend of mine, whose son was pitching at a D one school. And he said, my biggest regret was that he was this good. He's like, I wish he was just a little less than this. He's like, because he would have, he would have played in high school, he would have went to some nice little college, he would have played baseball, he would have graduated, he would have known it was over and that was it instead. Here he is, you know, 21 years old can throw 94 miles an hour and nobody cares. Right? Yeah. So anyway, there's my advice, and it bummed me all the hell out. But it'll save you a ton of money. If you listen to me right now get the kid at chess lesson. You know, and I don't know, some home weights. That's it. That's your sport. Go do something else with your time. Plus, I have a permanent farmer's tan, which I don't think I'm ever going to get rid of

Carrie 13:57
and being out watching your senpai right.

Scott Benner 14:00
Plus, it's the only thing I can imagine. Like, Carrie, I had somebody asked me recently, what I wanted to do in retirement, which was off putting because I'm 50 But I still you know, we're trying to financially plan. So I'm like, okay, and all I could think was watch Coldplay baseball. I couldn't think of anything else. Like, what else do you want to what do you want to do in your retirement? And it just popped into my head? I'm like, I want to watch the whole play baseball. And then I was like, and the guy said, Do you want to travel? And I'm like, I'm like, we'll be there playing

Carrie 14:34
baseball. Stadium to stadium. What kind of trouble? We're talking and I don't

Scott Benner 14:38
want it to be like some sad adult League. Where you don't I mean, like, I'm like, I wanted to be playing baseball. Can that happen? The guys like, I don't know, man. TFA I was like, Alright, I was like, just save as much money as you can. We'll figure it out later. I'm sure what's gonna happen is I'm gonna save as much money as I can, and then die. I'd give it to somebody else. That's about how I imagined This is gonna go. Alright, I'm sorry. Anyway, you are in the hospital, your kid is yelling at people. How long do you have staying in the hospital? What do you leave with as far as understanding?

Carrie 15:12
Okay, so he thankfully it was not in decay. We caught it sort of very early, I guess on the spectrum of how these things go his agency what wasn't crazy. So we, we were admitted for a few days, you know, sort of whatever the standard is one of the first pieces of advice besides tell them you think he's in DK to cut the line that our friend gave us was refused to leave the hospital without a Dexcom. And I didn't even know what a Dexcom was. I like Googled it, watch the little video and told the nurse practitioner that was like, a sign to deal with us that I wasn't leaving the hospital without a Dexcom. And she was like, Well, I can't, I can't like I'm not allowed to show you how to do it. And we really want people to learn the old fashioned way, and blah, blah, blah. And I'm like, Okay, I'm not leaving without a Dexcom. So we got the Dexcom in the hospital, thankfully, and, and the truth is, I like can't imagine having gone home without it.

Scott Benner 16:14
How did you make that happen? If they were like, we don't do it that way.

Carrie 16:18
Um, I tried to find a hook where I could convince them that they had to do it. And my son goes to a small Country Day School that doesn't have a school nurse. And so I basically said, I can't send it back to school without the ability to remotely monitor him constantly.

Scott Benner 16:38
Very smart. That word, they were like, Oh, all right. Isn't that funny?

Carrie 16:43
She was like, Okay, well, I'll write the script, but I'm not going to show you how to use it. I was like, Okay, well, that's even dumber than not writing. Right? Like, okay, I'm just gonna give it to you. And like, so I watched some YouTube videos, and we put it on him. And yeah, yeah,

Scott Benner 16:58
I mean, I don't think I'm supposed to say this about any of the products that are advertisers on the show. But this stuff's not that hard to figure out. Right? Yeah. You know, I read, the YouTube video works great. You could call me I could have explained it to you in three minutes, you could have called your friend, they could have hadn't found

Carrie 17:14
you yet. I found you shortly after, but you were not yet in my life. Oh,

Scott Benner 17:18
when does that happen?

Carrie 17:20
I think a week later, a week after we got out of the hospital, you know, I was doing what they sort of tell you to do, which is haul their helpline and talk to a different doctor than the one that's been dealing with you. And talk to them about changes and stuff. And they lost me at post bolusing. To be honest, it didn't take me that long to figure out that, that takes insulin a little while to work. And if you're constantly dosing at the end of meals, they that you're gonna, you're gonna have a problem. And so I asked them, I said, Well, why are we dosing him after the meals? Why aren't we dosing him before he eats? And they're like, Oh, well, like that comes later. And I was like, Okay, you're managing me. So I need to stop talking to you and do some Google searches and try to figure this out on my own. And that's what I did.

Scott Benner 18:13
Yeah. So you, you felt what was happening very quickly, that they were feeding eggs they were being spoon feeding you information slow. Yeah, yeah. And you were like, Alright, I want to get to the other part. Now.

Carrie 18:25
Let's fast forward, the management, you know, the managing me and let's talk about how I'm actually going to, like, manage my child,

Scott Benner 18:31
what was the like, what was the post meal spike looking like?

Carrie 18:38
Read hundreds, before we started Pre-Bolus, saying, I mean, pretty significant. You know, I had some concern when we started Pre-Bolus saying he's six, what if he doesn't eat all that we think he's gonna eat and stuff. But I got pretty comfortable that there wasn't a problem that juicebox couldn't fix. And that it was worth it. And so, I mean, we haven't seen barring pump failures and things like sort of just sort of technology happens. We haven't we haven't seen numbers like that in a very long time.

Scott Benner 19:13
Yeah. I sometimes look at the podcast as a whole. And I think it's just really a message about common sense around like for ideas. And I and I wish there are days I wish I could figure out a way to just say it one time, in 20 seconds, and make one episode just leave it up. You don't I mean, and and I feel like I tried to say it sometimes like that. I'm like, Look, here's what it's about. It's about timing and amount. It's about understanding the impact of the food like that kind of stuff. I know that you need the bigger conversations to understand it and everything. But it mean when that's the truth, that they're really just these couple of things you have to do to manage a meal and people are busy telling you to do it, opposite of how it works, which leads You just just I don't want to start you down this path of like, it's like destruction, it's like, we're never going to figure this out, because you've put me on the wrong path.

Carrie 20:10
Right? And it changes your expectations. I mean, you've talked about expectations in a slightly different context. But if you if you start to think like, Okay, well, I'm seeing a spike to 300, and like, the medical team is okay with that, then you start to think that that's actually where your child should be or where you should be aiming to get your child.

Scott Benner 20:33
And it's not carry, it's not the process. That's the problem. Like I understand the the slow start. And let's give you some of the information now and some of the information later, like all that makes sense to me. The problem is that during that, during that time, someone forgets to explain to you, this isn't how it's always going to be. And here are our expectations moving forward. For now, it's going to look like this, but in the, you know, blah, blah, blah, or later, we're going to want it to be this way. And it's exactly what you're saying. It's, I remember it as clear as day from an episode, like from the first year when this woman said to me, they gave me a range up to 200. And I kept him here, but then it started to go up. And I thought, Well, okay, that's fine. It's only 130. And then it was 140. And I thought, well, that's fine. It's only 140. I mean, that's only 40 points higher than 100. And before you knew it, she was at 200. Gun. Well, 200 is only 100 points higher than 150 or 50 points higher than 150. And I was fine at 150. And she just kept talking herself into the numbers being higher being okay. And I thought that's how people's minds work. Like that's how people gain weight. That's how people you know, do hard drugs, like I'll just do a little coke after work. And then then you don't I mean, like, it's like that kind of thing. Like, everyone thinks our brains are. I don't know why. But they're wired like that. And so the process coming out of a hospital, most hospitals with diabetes is just putting you in a bad situation where eventually you're going to be like, I'm just doing heroin. It's fine. You don't eat meat like that really is. I don't, I don't snort it. Like you don't I mean? Like, like, at least I'm not doing this. And then the next thing you know, your kids blood sugar's to 300 after every meal and you're like, Well, this is what it does. It's okay. The guy said it was alright. So I hear you are Well, I'm glad it hit you that way. You find the podcast, I'm talking in your ear, your blah blah, blah. Now we're gonna fast forward a little bit like through diabetes stuff too. He gets a pump

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Carrie 24:11
he gets a pump so we switched endos pretty quickly after I found the podcast and found an endo that was sort of much more the technology is there let's use it let's get it in your hands there's no reason to you know quote do it the old fashioned way for some ridiculous amount of time. We had him on a pump we started it like right before the holidays in December so you know a month and a half or so after after diagnosis

Scott Benner 24:43
and tell me which pump that wasn't I'm sorry.

Carrie 24:45
So we did the dash. We you know we vacillated you know between the wonderful pump options that are out there and for my son the the two pumps were just you know, he'd been pretty great about The whole thing given that his world was pretty shattered to, and his one, you know, red line was that tubing, I'm not doing it.

Scott Benner 25:10
Okay, well, so you end up on dash, and you're listening to the podcast? How are things going as far as like, what are your goals? And what are you seeing as far as outcomes?

Carrie 25:22
We're doing pretty well. You know, 65 70%, in range in range being kind of the default, I hadn't yet figured out. That wasn't the range that I should be hoping for long term, but it was taking a lot of work. I didn't think our basil was right. I was a little bit lost on what to do about that. Listen to the episode got that nailed down. And I'd say, so we cruised along on dash until, you know, beginning of May. And we were, we were 70 75%. In range, more highs than lows, nothing super high. And, you know, once in a while, we get a glimpse of an 85 or 90 or 95%, and range. And those were, you know, days where I'd screenshot my, my phone and like, you know, pat myself on the back, but nights, you know, waking up two or three times a night was pretty common. We were we were micromanaging it. I was literally a full time paying Chris. Yeah.

Scott Benner 26:32
So when you hear about on the pod five, is that something you thought immediately about? Or did you take time to? Oh, yeah, okay.

Carrie 26:42
I was, I was thinking about, actually, pretty early on, and then found out that the Omnipod, five was close to approval, although there was this caveat that people had been saying that for a long time. And I thought that was, you know, it was worth waiting a little bit to see if that came down. Because honestly, it just seemed a lot less intimidating to me. I mean, remember to we hadn't, we hadn't been doing this that long. So it felt less intimidating, it felt a little more user friendly. And I'm, I'm a help desk person, like something goes wrong on like, my work computer or my work email. Like, I like that I have someone to call and talk about that with. And on that basis alone almost loop didn't seem like the right fit at this time. So

Scott Benner 27:33
I gotcha. Yeah. When when your email won't work. You don't sit around trying to figure out how to fix you're like, I'm just gonna call this guy at the number. Yeah, that's me. I'm a help desk. Let her tell me. I'm not doing this. So I understand. I absolutely do. And so you get on the pod five, when may 7. Oh, look at your camera, like came on Mother's Day?

Carrie 27:55
Oh,

Scott Benner 27:57
that's an easy way to remember. Okay, so hold on. June, July, August, September, October. Oh, wow. You've had six months, six months. Okay. Great. Tell me all about it.

Carrie 28:11
Okay, well, the important caveat here is that we got it. We were We were one of the first people at least as best I can tell on like Facebook, who weren't in the trial to get it, or endo hadn't been trained on it. They were like, we're not going to be any help to you. You got to figure it out. We'll write it at the time it was off label because my son wasn't six yet. Well, we'll write the script, but like you're completely on your own. You hadn't you hadn't done any Pro Tip series on this yet. So we were really like, open the box, read the manual, try to figure it out. And with the benefit of hindsight, I might have done our setup very differently and probably saved ourselves a lot of time and heartache. But we you know, open the box and put in our settings and had a lot of struggles at the beginning.

Scott Benner 29:00
Okay, so your settings where

Carrie 29:03
we put our settings in from dash, I mean, which were good settings for Dash but I hadn't, I hadn't appreciated I was too impulsive about the whole thing. I hadn't appreciated how the algorithm was going to work. I had been so jumpy about getting it and wanting to try it right away that I hadn't. I hadn't thought through or reached out to resources about strategies for setting it up. I literally just dumped my settings in in hippo and I was like, Okay, great. We're

Scott Benner 29:31
all going to sleep now. So over, everyone is over.

Carrie 29:35
We're done with diabetes. I told my job I was gonna come back full time I was like, this is the you know, next week maybe the week after will be good.

Scott Benner 29:43
Yeah, I'm probably gonna start running like marathons and I am gonna die it probably probably gonna get shredded. You know, maybe

Carrie 29:51
I'm gonna have all this time on my hands. What on earth am I going to do with myself?

Scott Benner 29:55
I think I should knit while I'm running. This is going to be wonderful. So in stat is what, let me guess. And if I'm wrong, of course, not me, is what you learned over time that your settings from a manual pump were a starting point, but that you were adding insulin so frequently and other places that really your settings were very weak.

Carrie 30:18
That's completely true. The other thing that we struggled with was, there was no real direction on let the algorithm work, let it learn, don't touch it, let it do its thing, right. And then he'd be at like 250 and climbing and I'd be sitting in the corner, having an anxiety attack and being like, I can't let it learn on its own. I must give him insulin. And, you know, and then being told, Well, you're gonna screw up the algorithm when you do that. And you've done that. And so now you've like, set yourself back.

Scott Benner 30:51
Isn't it funny? Because it's the beginning. And it is a it's a different algorithm. There are people who will tell you don't touch it. Don't do anything. Don't just let it we'll figure it out. And then there are people who will say no, if your blood sugar's high Bolus and right teach it that you need it, you need more insulin, which I believe is the is the line, right from my, from the nurse practitioner that was on my thing, right? She's like, if your high Bolus, it'll figure it out when it sees more insulin, but you don't know either of those things to be true or not true. So you're just sort of sitting there going,

Carrie 31:28
right, I'll go a few days where I'll let it do its thing, and he'll be high, and then I'll have a panic attack. And I'll be like, I can't do it anymore. And I'll give him tons of insulin. And then it didn't seem to work. And so, I mean, the first the first month was really, really tough. I mean, it was our it was our own fault, in that we weren't sufficiently educated and didn't have the right expectations and didn't know how to manage it. But once we went back to kind of basic principles of insulin and how things work, we'd started to get better and figure it out.

Scott Benner 32:01
Right? Listen, if it makes you feel any better. As soon as last night, Arden had a she knows what to do, like the meals at college are terrible, right? So she has to basically make a secondary Bolus for her meals that come out of the cafeteria. She has to it doesn't it doesn't matter how big she tells it. Like if she if she says, Hey, this is 70 carbs this meal. And you know, she's She needs a secondary Bolus later, if she would have held the same meal, it's 90 carbs, it still wouldn't matter. That's how crappy the food is, you know what I mean? And, and so you have to, I mean, you have to understand how these algorithms all of them end up working. And so for Arden, who's looping last night, she has this one at blood sugar, like two hours after a meal. And I'm like Arden, you didn't make the secondary poll. She's like, well, I'm doing my homework. I forgot. I was like, well, that's fine, but put an insulin right. And so I I can see on Nightscout what she did. And she just makes a Bolus. And I text her right back. I'm like, Hey, that's not going to work. You know, that's not going, what are you doing? Like so She's so busy with her homework. She's just she like throws in like a unit a half of insulin. As soon as she does that the algorithms like a unit a half, we don't need this turns off her basil. And that's probably what was happening to you, when you were putting in extra insulin, like you told the algorithm, these settings are going to work. And then you're like, No, no, here's a whole bunch of extra insulin. And it's thinking, No, I'm going to get this blood sugar back down based on our settings, except it never was going to because your settings were that far off, I guess for the algorithm, how long did it take for it to learn? Or did you did you bite the bullet and reset the controller and start over. So we didn't

Carrie 33:49
do a reset? We did go all in on the teaching it if he's high on bolusing if he's heading high on bolusing, we made all of our carb ratios, more aggressive. We started treating lows much less aggressively and really like micro dosing it because the you know, we then understood that the background, it's basil, the micro boluses had been shut off for a while. And so the what we used to dose on the dash to treat a low was going to spike him super high if we did it this way because there was no insulin circulating around in his system. And we started just thinking about it differently. Like not to not to use the sports analogy, but I've I've used this when other people who are just starting on the five have kind of reached out to me. It's a it's a great teammate. It's like a star shortstop. It's gonna do a really, really great job, but you still have to you have to be in the game and you still have to play the game and it's so required ers, you know, work and care. And it can only it can't do there's, you have to recognize what its limitations are and kind of jump in,

Scott Benner 35:09
right? I feel great about what you just said about learning how we treat low blood sugars when you're on an algorithm, because I'm starting to see a lot of people figuring that out online, which is, which is really good. But the idea of, you know, if you're treating a low it, one o'clock in the afternoon, but this algorithm has been thinking for the last 90 minutes, you're gonna get low at one o'clock in the afternoon, it's been taking your Basal way, and insulin away in one way, or in one fashion or another, probably for 90 minutes. So yeah, you're still drifting low, because whatever happened before, ended up being too heavy. But there's nothing there to resist when you put carbs in, in that scenario. And so all of a sudden, 15 carbs or juice box or something like that, is going to turn you into a it'll turn into 250. You know, instead of before, when your Basal had been running the entire time in the background and you were low. It's odd that that low blood sugar on a manual pump versus that low blood sugar on an algorithm. The number is the same. But everything that happened prior to it's different.

Carrie 36:17
And the effect that anything's gonna have on it is totally different, right?

Scott Benner 36:21
Because there's either more or less insulin, new insulin from baseline for the last 90 minutes, depending on which system you're in.

Carrie 36:32
We rely on you know, the, the PDM. For the Omnipod. Five, there's a way to kind of see how it's been micro Bolus thing. And we try to look at that before we make any low treatment decision or any Bolus, you know, to stop a high or to stop a climb. Because we like you have to factor in what the pump is doing and how long it's been doing it for.

Scott Benner 37:00
Yeah, I think I'm supposed to say that it's a controller not a PDM anymore. Sorry, no, no, I don't. I just I don't want to, I don't want to get a text. Like, you know, a week after this comes out. And somebody says, hey, at 34 minutes in your conversation with Carrie about on the pod five, she calls it a PDM. And would you mind? So I'm getting around that right now. My son

Carrie 37:24
calls it the doser. So you know, whatever. Oh,

Scott Benner 37:27
yeah, that's great. I know, a lot of public relations people who'll be thrilled to know that. Give me the picker and the dozer and let's get rolling here.

Carrie 37:36
Yeah, that's, that's six year old terminology for about

Scott Benner 37:39
right for me. Okay. So how long did it so is hindsight telling you that you didn't put settings in in a way that was going to give you success up front? Yes. Okay. So did you have you learned over time that what, what ended up being in those Omnipod five pro tip episodes is true. Like, for some reason, when that algorithm begins, the settings needed to be somewhere near 5050. Basal Bolus, and then it adjusts off that it doesn't it won't even keep doing that five minutes later. It just for some reason needs to know that going in.

Carrie 38:16
Yeah. And look, I mean, one of the things that we've struggled with me occasionally, you know, talk about with some frequency is like, Should we do the Hard Reset? Right? Like now we're six months in, we have all this knowledge that we didn't have at the time. But I don't know if so risk feels like, I've spent six months teaching this out what to do, and it's pretty darn good.

Scott Benner 38:39
This is why women stay with men. Right? Yeah.

Carrie 38:43
Yeah, I mean, it's, you know, it's a big, it's a big leap to take. So I'm not there yet, though. You could you could potentially get me there. If you if you thought that was the right thing.

Scott Benner 38:51
No, listen, if I listen, but I know is, you know, not going to be helpful to you probably but so to kind of go over that a little bit. You know, it's in the on the pod five Pro Tip series, which I did in conjunction with Omni pod and healthcare professional and they're actually I have to say, so they're, they're, they're, they're good episodes, like they'll really will help you. But the the algorithm once 5050. And I have to say if I had that conversation prior to starting on on the pod five, when we started her, I would have probably just taken her total daily insulin and chopped it in half. I think that's what I would have ended up doing. I think I would have just said like, I don't know, she gets this much insulin every day. I'll take half of that number divided by 24. And that's going to be our Basal rate.

Carrie 39:45
I mean, that's what we would like if we were starting this now with all that with the benefit of those episodes and that knowledge, that's what we would have done, but, you know, we we didn't have it and we're not anywhere near 5050 Um,

Scott Benner 40:00
Yeah, not not not to say that your son needs 5050. It's to say it's you really have to listen to it to hear to explain, but that's what the, for some reason, that's what the algorithm needs as it begins to learn. Right. Right. Right. So, and I don't, I don't know. Like, I don't know why it doesn't just, I don't know. It doesn't. Listen, I don't know, I didn't program the thing. So I don't understand how it works.

Carrie 40:26
It just is what it is. But in retrospect, given what we experienced in the first few weeks, it's easy to see why that it. It makes clear that what what you said in the in the episode about that is right. Like we were not at 5050. Our settings were at 5050. And that was a mistake.

Scott Benner 40:44
Okay. And so what you got out of that were spikes and meals,

Carrie 40:47
spikes at meals, she, you know, huge spikes with low treatments until we figured out that we were completely doing that wrong. And, but pretty stable night times, almost from the beginning. I'm not sure that without the stable night times, we would have stayed with it at that time. You know, I think we would have probably stopped it and then come back to it once like there was more kind of knowledge of how to set it up and how to get started with it successfully out there. But I was jumping in I wanted it and I wanted it now and you know, there's a price to pay for that.

Scott Benner 41:29
You were enticed by the sleeping? Oh,

Carrie 41:33
yes, it was good. I mean, really can't. And we haven't been at it that long. We were only sleep deprived for you know, from like October to May I can't imagine people that have not slept in years. How wonderful. Something like this would be. But like barring a technology failure, a compression low that screws things up. A sensor error, you know, a pump sight absorption issue, right? Something like on the technology, we all basically slipped through the night. Yeah, no, that's pretty great. It's really good.

Scott Benner 42:10
Yeah. Arden had the same situation with the Omnipod. Five, like almost immediately, like her nights are for really terrific. You know, actually, I've learned a lot about overnight since Oregon went to college because because she's so far away, excuse me. And you know, there's no way to help her and all that stuff. We did kind of dial back her her overnight numbers a little bit like, you know, I'm okay if she's overnight at 95 100 105 110. Like she because she's 13 hours away from us. And you know, my best bet to save her life. If, if something happens is a person who lives with her who may or may not be drunk, you know what I mean? So excuse me, when that becomes your reality. You're sort of like, alright, well, let me be a little more careful. But after the first couple days, and getting things figured out, like I mean, I should probably knock on something. But Arden hasn't had a low overnight, like the entire time she's been away at school. Yeah, it's huge. It's a big deal. So, so Okay, so that that kept you in the game a little longer. You're like, Alright, man, again, I'll figure out the rest if I get the sleep. Right. So what did you actually figure something out?

Carrie 43:23
No, I Well, I changed our changed our ratios, so that he was getting bigger Bolus is at mealtimes. But in an effort to raise the total daily insulin and compensate for what I viewed as like, a less aggressive than I'd like, micro bowl, I

Scott Benner 43:43
stop you for a second and so on the pod says that when you change that settings in the pump, when you put settings on the pod five, those settings, as soon as the algorithm begins to work, those settings are only for manual operation, that that is completely correct. Okay, so you're saying we might say you change ratios? You mean Sorry, you kind of started counting carbs differently.

Carrie 44:09
I started counting carbs differently so that he was getting more insulin per day than he was getting with our old.

Scott Benner 44:19
Right. So you, if I met, you said, Hey, carb ratio is one to whatever you thought it was, right? You see that not working? You can't just go tell the pump. Hey, magic algorithm, instead of it being one to 20 carbs, I want you to make it one to 15 carbs, because that doesn't change the algorithms opinion. Right? And so you started counting up a meal and going I think this is definitely 40 carbs, but I'm going to tell the puppets 50

Carrie 44:48
Right. I'm going to give him more I'm going to tell the pump that he needs more insulin on a daily basis so that when the pump is aiming for it's 5050 it's Thinking about the total bottom line number differently.

Scott Benner 45:03
But then after it figures that out, does it mess you up when you're counting carbs? Like you always have to overestimate the carbs? If no,

Carrie 45:10
then then you got to back it off. Okay? So the other thing that we I don't want to say like figure it out. But we started changing our Pre-Bolus time. We were we were militant, about a 15 minute Pre-Bolus. Scott said it's a 15 minute Pre-Bolus, the pro tip episode says it's a 15 minute Pre-Bolus, it must always be a 15 minute Pre-Bolus. And what we found was that, depending on how much might how active the algorithm had been in the background, leading up to the meal, a 15 minute, Pre-Bolus wasn't always going to lead to a successful outcome. And that, you know, whereas prior, you know, on the dash, let's say he goes, you know, iDose for a meal 15 minutes before he's 115 and flat, and I want him to be, you know, 90 Heading down when he's going to eat whatever he's about to eat. So I, I Pre-Bolus, for what I know, will get him there. If you take that same strategy on the Omnipod, five, what we were finding, and Danny is pretty insulin sensitive. So there's a caveat there. But what we're finding is that the algorithm would see him heading down, and would reduce or cut off the basil or the micro boluses. And if we could have him eating when he was 100, and flat or 110. And flat, there would still be insulin being given to him in the background. And that was leading to much more successful outcomes post meal time. So we started changing the Pre-Bolus time from 15 minutes, I'm really sorry, I know it's supposed to be 15 minutes, not

Scott Benner 46:58
supposed to be what they meant.

Carrie 47:01
But we we we have now sort of adjusted it based on what how much insulin, we think he has circulating his system based on the auto history. And it's been a lot more successful.

Scott Benner 47:13
And you've been making the Pre-Bolus longer or shorter, shorter.

Carrie 47:18
I mean, if he's high, we'll make it longer. Or if he's heading up, we'll make it longer because we want to give the insulin a chance to work. But if he's kind of where I want him to be after the meal, depending on what's if he hasn't gotten the insulin in a while in the background, we'll keep it around 15 minutes. But if the pump has been active, we'll make it we'll make it shorter so that he doesn't go low pre or during mealtime, right.

Scott Benner 47:45
Wow, you're good at talking about this? Do you know

Carrie 47:49
I've listened to you a lot. And I'm just trying to

Scott Benner 47:53
know I mean, you're good at explaining it. You know, it's it's a simple idea. And it gets lost on people when they make the switch from pumping to algorithms that there's nothing in your pump, when you're using a regular pump that says, hey, you're getting low. So I'll turn off your Basal insulin. And because of that, all of your experiences are predicated on a constant delivery of basil. And now your experiences aren't always predicated on that. And it's a leap for some people. And I don't know if it's just because they don't think of it that way. Or if they have just been if they if they really didn't know what they were doing before they just learned what to expect and how to handle it. Do you know what I mean? So I was very heartwarming to hear you thinking through all this and figuring it out. Well, today now six months later, what how's it going? I mean, do you spike it meals anymore? Did you figure that all out? It's it happens sometimes you know how to fix it. What happens? I

Carrie 49:04
mean, look, he's six. So so there are there are days where, where it's just total brilliance like Halloween, Halloween just happened. That's a that's a good example. He was he was 99% in range 80 to 150 as the range set the entire day. And given what went on that day. Like I pricked his finger when he was fine, because I didn't believe that the Dexcom was working, because it was it was that good. So there are there are stretches and days of like total brilliance. And then, you know, there are days when for whatever reason, were less successful. I mean, the variables are still there. It's not eliminating the variables. It's not eliminating a super absorbent pump site where he's gonna be low more. It's not eliminating the level of activity. It's not eliminating growth hormones like one of the things that we didn't know at the beginning, but we've learned is that the algorithm can't learn time of day, the algorithm is never going to learn that your kid goes to sleep and starts climbing at 10 o'clock at night, it's never going to learn that it can't. So that's where like, you know, you need to be the team player, and you need to come in, and you know that that's going to happen, you have to, you have knowledge that the algorithm doesn't that every night at 10 o'clock, our kid rises because of growth hormones, and we need to Bolus that we need to Bolus it early, and we need to do it aggressively. So, you know, in terms of in terms of outcomes, his his agency is great. His time and range average over 90 days is is 89%. And, you know, there are some bad days built into that. And then there's some real brilliant days built into that. And you know, I'm not, I'm not sure how to make it better, I have noticed that like, one of our struggles now is figuring out how to string together, more of the brilliant days across multiple pump changes. I think it's the learning nature of the algorithm, I don't know. And I don't think insolate has shared sort of the period of time that the pump considers in making adjustments to its own calculations, but you have to recognize that that's like an evolving thing. And I'd like to be able to stretch together more brilliant days in a row without a bad day in between. But I'm not sure how realistic that is,

Scott Benner 51:47
when all this technology comes out doesn't matter what company it comes from, I always try to remember how amazing it was to get a Dexcom the first time. And now in hindsight, I look back at it. And I think well that thing was not as accurate as it could have been. It was difficult to put on it the use of a manual inserter the Dexcom Did you know that you'd like put the sensor bed like on and there was like a tube that came off it with a plunger at the end. And you would actually have to like, like, boom, like push down on the plunger to get it to go in. And you know, like I look back on all that. And I think well with hindsight, that looks like a train wreck. But in the moment, it was the best thing I've ever seen. Yeah, it was the absolute the best thing I had ever seen in my life. And so I try to apply that idea to Omnipod five or blooper, anything that people I keep thinking like, imagine what its gonna look like a year from now, or two years from now or five years from now, like, this is gonna be amazing, you know? And you're not describing something that's like, oh, a train wreck you're describing? Yeah, yeah. And that's what I want to understand, like, compared to you doing it manually. So for a moment, take out all of your effort and your time and you're not sleeping, right, because we understand that you got saved all that stuff. Right? Just just management, just health wise, are you where you are before, worse off or better off?

Carrie 53:18
Definitely better, unquestionably better. You know, both on on a numbers basis, and also on my mental health in terms of the variables that I'm dealing with. I mean, I remember I listened to like your pro tip episode on like basil testing. I'm like, sitting there looking at my, like, newly diagnosed six year old, and I was like, No, effing way. Right. Like, like, it just felt so hard. And then the idea that you could nail it and then have to change it. And the beauty of the five is that it it kind of takes if you're just camping out in automated mode, which is what we do. Like, it kind of takes that away, like it eliminates the variable of whatever you think the Basal rate is or should be. And that's, that's really freeing.

Scott Benner 54:12
Yeah, no, I understand. Excellent. Well, that's great news. Like you're a, you're a proponent, that if somebody came to you and said, I'm thinking of getting this, you'd say, do it.

Carrie 54:24
Absolutely. Do it. Understand how it will work, right? Understand that it's the teammate. It's not going to carry the team, you have to be there, you have to be engaged. I think the auto history is really important. And factoring that into how you manage your child is is really important. And I think that there's, um, that on the low treatment side, I mean, we we made this chart for like his summer camp. He goes to like a day camp locally, and they have a nurse team that manages it and they've been managing kids with diabetes. His for a long time. And we roll in and they've never heard of the five before. And they're like, Okay, so if he goes low, we give them a juice box, right? And I was like, Wow, no, here's my, you know, Excel spreadsheet of different scenarios where you might treat with two carbs, or six carbs, or eight carbs. And I think if you can, if you can figure that out, and what works for your kid, and figure out the Pre-Bolus time, you know, are you going to have a flat graph, you know, flat at 110 or 100, every single day. I don't think that's a realistic expectation, or at least I haven't figured out yet how to make that happen. But, look, I mean, you high 80%, over a long period of time with sleep, almost doesn't matter what you have to do during the day.

Scott Benner 55:49
And your, your son's not eating like a pescatarian diet are some specific,

Carrie 55:56
if I told you what my son ate, it would make your skin crawl. He has Eggo waffles and pop tarts and pizza and cake. And I mean, we, you know, there's lots of different schools of thought for us and for our family at this moment in time. Keeping his normal as normal as it was, was really important, I think, for his mental health and his acceptance of this. So that's the choice we made and may make a different choice down the road, he may make a different choice, but no, I mean, like I, I can dose Toaster Strudels and not have a spine. Now,

Scott Benner 56:32
when I look at you, I have two things I want to say here. One, I'm going to say kind of sounds joking, but I'm being serious. On the pod.com forward slash juicebox. If anybody listening is thinking about getting an omni pod dash or an omni pod five, thanks very much. The second thing is, I I'm, I'm really stunned at how you were able to take my like not the Omnipod five Pro Tip series, but the other Pro Tip series, the bigger one, and you took the information out of it, and you did with it what I intended, which is you, you learned about it, and then you molded it into your life, and you extracted from it and built onto it. I know that people can hear them and think these must be the rules. But they're just a jumping in point, do not Don't be mean like you have to experience the rest of it that you have to apply it and watch it work and watch it fail and go, Okay, I that's really I don't know, I'm just very I don't even know what the word is, like, you're making me feel very good about something that I did.

Carrie 57:41
You should I mean, we, we wouldn't be even close to where we are now. Without that, and the fact that it can be applied to, you know, the fact that it can be applied to a new technology that didn't even exist when you were or at least didn't exist in your world, when you're making a lot of these episodes, insulin still works the same way. And it works the same way, whether you're on loop or on the five or anything else. And you know that

Scott Benner 58:11
that's great. It really is amazing. I'm, I'm so happy for you guys, first of all, but I don't know, like you say something out loud years ago, like this whole thing, like, you know, I used to say all the time, like managing insulin is about timing and amount, you have to use the right amount of insulin at the right time. And it holds true. If you're putting it in with a syringe, if you're putting it in with a pump, if you're putting it in with an algorithm, it all still is the same there are influences on your blood sugar, and there and and you know, that are carbohydrates or body function or whatever that are trying to push your blood sugar up. There are influences on your blood sugar that are insulin that are trying to put the push them down. And you just have to kind of keep those influences in a state of flux where they really neither of them can kind of beat the other one. And then that's what stability is. You know, and if you can wrap your head around that, then you're on your way. But I don't know I mean those protip series it's 2022 in November, I think they came out in 2019 or 2020 Maybe it so they're already two almost three years old and and that they applied to another Technologies. I'm just very happy today to hear this from you. It's it's interesting. I feel like I'm hearing my voice filtered through another person's life and then spit back at me if that makes sense while you're talking.

Carrie 59:37
Oh, that's that's great. I mean, I you know, I think some of in addition to the Pro Tips The one thing that I would say is you know, there are little nuggets in a lot of the other episodes that can be life changing. I mean, I I've said to other people that changing our ducks calm lines changed my life and rethinking about the way that you say Your own expectations is is also, you know, as the caregiver, your you know, our mental health matters to matters less but matters too. And, you know, the way the human brain works? I mean, you said at the beginning it, it, it's consistent. So

Scott Benner 1:00:16
yeah. Well, so do you feel like take all the diabetes stuff away? Do you feel better? Now, like than you did a year ago? Are you different?

Carrie 1:00:27
I mean, then then at diagnosis, yes. I mean, we, I recognize that, like, we're, we're early in this in this marathon that a lot of people have been plugging away at it a lot longer than us. And, you know, we sort of have this luxury of having the, you know, the best technology available now. And that's, you know, an incredible gift that I feel like I've given my kid. Yeah, I mean, look, are there days where I want to still sit in the corner and cry? Of course, absolutely. Like, both, you know, on a macro level, because he has type one diabetes, and also on the micro level, because maybe he's having a day where what I think is gonna happen doesn't really happen. But I think I'm getting better at it. And I think you do. At the beginning, everyone said, it gets easier. And I was like, That's BS, right? That's like when someone you love dies? And they're like, Oh, time will heal it. It's like, No, it doesn't heal it. I still missed the person. It doesn't get better, you just get better at it. Yeah,

Scott Benner 1:01:36
it's 100%. Right. Now, I mean, I don't know if you're quoting me, or if that's your experience. But yeah, that's, it's just right. diabetes is always hard. And, but there'll be a time when you have so many tools and so much experience that it's, you know, it's it's, I don't know, it's sort of like when you watch a sporting event, or, you know, you think God, how does that person do that? Yeah, I could never do that. But right, you know, maybe you couldn't, maybe you couldn't throw football 70 yards in the air, right. But you could find a way to get better at throwing a football and you might get you know, and then that would make the thing the task easier. And this is what happens it to all levels with people.

Carrie 1:02:15
And I'm hoping the week continued, that it continues to get easier, because I still feel like it's my full time job. And I'd like to get to a place where maybe I don't feel that way. But I think it's like important to know that it's, it still sucks, it's always gonna suck, it's always gonna be a lot of work, it's never going to be like under control. But you do start things get easier little things, we wouldn't let them have Toaster Strudels at the beginning, because I couldn't figure out how to dose for them. And then eventually, I figured out how to dose for them. And now he's happier because he can eat his crappy breakfast in the morning. And little thing, like those things get easier. And I'm excited to see how much easier they can get as we kind of go through this.

Scott Benner 1:02:55
Oh, the other, um, a couple weeks ago, art and I saw something happen with her blood sugar like it started to go up. But then it stopped. And it got like, whatever. I wasn't with her. But something hit her hard. But her Bolus hit hard back and then she leveled out. And she was good. And it didn't take long. Like it wasn't a big spike or anything like that. And I asked her later in the day, I was like, Hey, would you eat you know, last evening, like eight o'clock or something like that. She was oh, I got hungry. And the cafe was closed already. I couldn't get over there in time. And I was like, okay, she because I just had a bowl of cereal. And I was like, Oh, wow, I didn't ask her what kind I don't know what she ate. But I all I know is that my 18 year old daughter Bolus, a bowl of cereal, didn't go over 140 and didn't get low afterwards. Like, that's amazing. Because I can remember, I can remember standing in my kitchen, going, Hey, what do you want for breakfast? And then thinking in my head, don't say cereal? Don't Don't? Don't Don't Don't Don't Don't say that. You know, and, and then there's that, of course, there's an episode where I talked about where she got old enough, you know, when she was younger. And she was starting to understand her appointments. You know what I mean? We're in with the Endo. And then we got outside in the driveway. And she said, What could I do to make my agency slower? And I said, well, for the moment, if you could just stop eating cereal, that would be huge. Because I haven't figured out how to do that yet. This is a long, long time ago, you know, and, and she's like, okay, and she just stopped. That was it. And then I figured it out better. I figured out insulin in general. And then I started applying it to higher glycemic stuff and figuring out how to do that. And I mean, I wouldn't say that Arden probably has five bowls of cereal a year, you know, but at least we know how to handle it. Now when it happens. It's very cool. Carrie, is there anything we haven't said that you want to anything we've skipped or missed or that I haven't asked? I don't think so. We did it that easily. This was very good. I almost don't want to make this a long Are episode because it's so succinct. And you were so clear about it. Yeah, exactly. You'd come back later because you seem cool. I think we would like each other.

Carrie 1:05:10
I happen to be a Phillies fan as well. So I think I think we could get along very well.

Scott Benner 1:05:15
Are you in the area?

Carrie 1:05:17
I'm not but I went to college in Pennsylvania. Oh, no kidding. So I was surrounded by it for for a long time and didn't have a strong opinion of my own at the time about baseball teams. So I was happy to kind of sign on with what the group was doing. It would be

Scott Benner 1:05:33
hard to be here and not be a Phillies fan that's for sure. So why don't we just because it has to go somewhere in the episodes I will just tell you that the World Series is happening right now as we record this, the Phillies are down three games to to win the World Series are heading back to Houston for Game six. And my son and I actually went to the World Series last night, we went and watched the Phillies lose three toe. But it was one of those things that, you know, as soon as they got in, I said to him was like if we can find a way to go, we should go you know? And he's like, Yeah, okay. Like, like, you know, wasn't gonna get him to argue about that. I've never been to a World Series, I think he and I went to one, one national league championship game, maybe in 2011, if I'm remembering correctly. So the oddity is, we don't go to a lot of baseball games, like in person, like professional baseball games, because my son is usually playing baseball when baseball is being played, so you don't get that opportunity. And anyway, it very quickly became obvious that we did not win the lottery from the Phillies for tickets, you know, which are at ticket price at face value. And you start looking into the secondary market, and the tickets are just, they're ridiculous, like, you know, very cheap seat very, very cheap seats are $800, like $1,000. And you don't even get a seat, you get to stand in a sea of drunk people and watch the game, you know. And I went online, I thought, I wonder if I know anybody, like through the podcast or something that might know somebody says it does anybody? Would anybody be able to get tickets for this game that, you know, if they were interested in selling, I'd want to know about them. And the one thing you don't know is that a person contacted me privately and said, I have a friend whose father is a part owner in the Astros. And I might be able to get tickets. And we tried that that didn't work out because we asked so late. And other people would come online and say like I used to try here, actually, one person gave me an idea of of an app to use that ended up being less expensive. But what I didn't expect is that someone came on to the Facebook group and they're like, Hey, everybody, let's give Scott money to go to the World Series. And I'm like, now that gets weird carry because I have a job. You know what I mean? Like, and I'm not looking for people to like, I don't know, crowd fund me going to a baseball game with my son. And she, she had made this. It was Susie, she had made this like overture online. And I have to admit, I ignored her. Like I just I didn't want to like because no matter what I do, she's going to do it. Like if I go no, no, no, don't be silly. Please don't do that. She's gonna say no, you helped me or whatever. And I'm gonna do this. So I just kind of ignored her I felt bad. And then she emailed my moderator and said to Isabel, I want to put up a post to try to raise money for Scott to go to the World Series. And now I it's weird, because I'm you don't I mean, Carrie, like, I It's lovely. And that would be amazing. If somebody did that for you, but I don't need that. And there's part of me that doesn't want it. Do you know what I mean? Like, I don't want somebody to do that. So I told Isabel, you're gonna get a note. Ignore it. And, and she's like, Okay, I'm like, just don't respond to this. I feel bad. I'm like, just don't because it's gonna turn into people giving me money to go to a baseball game, and I'm uncomfortable with that. But then Susie just kept going and going online. And finally she put up a post and said, Hey, like, let's Scotland's go to the worlds here. You don't I mean, like, it's the weirdest, like, make a wish thing ever. I don't have any reason to be making a wish. And the next thing I know, there's like $1,300 in a pile. And I said to my son, I was like, Well, I now people gave me this money. I was like, i i I'd feel weird now not using it for what they wanted me to use it for. So we got up yesterday morning, found seats online, and I had a great time. Like, it was awesome. Really. It was amazing. It's the most intense sporting event I've ever been at.

Carrie 1:09:36
I brought my I brought my six year old to his first baseball my type one to his first baseball game. I took him to a Mets game over the summer. And I thought to myself like, Okay, this is gonna be hard. This can be hard to dos. He's gonna want everything. And it actually you know, it. It went really well. It was like one of those holes When miracles like the algorithm handled where, where I got it wrong, and I just kept giving insulin when I saw I'm starting to creep up, and it was actually like really empowering because you spend all this time counting the car, you know, when you're first diagnosed, counting the carbs and thinking about Pre-Bolus time and all the rest. And this was a night where we just sort of, alright, you want to chicken fingers in the fries, you want to chase it with that the ice cream cup that comes in the helmet like it is what it is.

Scott Benner 1:10:30
You probably felt the way I felt the first time in a movie theater that artists like I'm gonna get a slushy and yes, and cookie dough bites. I was like, I don't know if that's a good idea. But yeah, so I put your game face on. Yeah, we were no algorithms then. Like I remember us being in the lobby. And I was like, if you're gonna do that we're gonna Bolus right now. And I and my, my theory was bunch of insulin. And then we'll feed the insulin backwards, like so that's basically what we did. Like, we got her falling, and then you start hitting this IC and that thing, just boom, boom, that keeps trying to push you up. And I just kept using the IC as a parachute for the freefall from the insulin. And that I've you know, over over the years, I got better at it. But the first time that's what I did, I was like, I'm just gonna pour this insulin over your head, and then you start drinking the Coca Cola Slurpee that you just got. So anyway, Carrie, I really appreciate you doing this. I have to jump off because believe it or not, I'm recording another episode a half an hour. So

Carrie 1:11:32
I'm thanks so much for your time and for everything you've done for us. I really appreciate it.

Scott Benner 1:11:35
It's my pleasure. Did a lot for me today to like hearing you talk about stuff through the lens of the podcast was was uplifting to me. So I really appreciate that.

Carrie 1:11:45
Thanks, Scott. I really appreciate it. I'll talk to you soon.

Scott Benner 1:11:54
A huge thanks to Carrie for coming on the show and sharing her story with us. And I want to thank BetterHelp and remind you to go to betterhelp.com forward slash juice box to save 10% off your first month of therapy. So many of us spend so much time helping others. Once in a while you should help yourself betterhelp.com forward slash juicebox. A huge thank you to one of today's sponsors, G voc glucagon, find out more about Chivo Capo pen at G Vogue glucagon.com forward slash juicebox. you spell that GVOKEGLUC AG o n.com. Forward slash juicebox. Don't forget to check out the private Facebook group. It's completely free Juicebox Podcast type one diabetes. And if you're looking for all those episodes about on the pod five, there's a list right in the private Facebook group in the feature tab with all of them right there. I think you can also find them at juicebox podcast.com. Or go into your podcast app and search Omni pod five pro tip. They'll pop right up. Thank you so much for listening. I'll be back very soon with another episode of The Juicebox Podcast.


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