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PCDIAB

Portrait of Dr. Hans de Vries, Scientific Coordinator of PCDIAB

Dr Hans de Vries

Scientific Coordinator of PCDIAB, based at the departments of Internal Medicine and Endocrinology of the Academic Medical Centre Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Research field

Diabetes

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Research Profile

Who?

“My name is Hans de Vries. As a physician and clinical researcher, I help patients suffering from diabetes to cope with their disease. I want to give them the best treatment possible. It is my goal to develop an artificial pancreas that diabetics can use in the comfort of their own home”, says Dr de Vries.

Why?

The majority of patients with insulin-treated diabetes inject themselves around four times a day. They monitor their blood glucose via a finger prick. They have to adjust the insulin dose to their meals and exercise activities. Still, episodes of low blood glucose occur, which can lead to hospitalisation and complications.

What?

The artificial pancreas will constantly monitor the blood sugar level of patients. It will actively keep the blood sugar level between certain boundaries. This will reduce the occurrence of diabetes-related complications. The device is developed to be used at home and it will simplify care for diabetes patients.

How?

PCDIAB brings together three small to medium-sized enterprises, three academic institutions and one industrial partner. It combines expertise on algorithms, microelectronics, system integration, wireless communication, remote alarms, diabetes, glucose metabolism and risk management to create new artificial pancreas systems.

Bringing an artificial pancreas to the patient's home

In the Picture
In the Picture
Image credits

Background image: PCDIAB

Portrait of the project coordinator: PCDIAB

Timeline (in chronological order): 1921: University of Toronto Archives; 1950-1980: Wikipedia; 1978: Medscape; 2000: Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation; 2012: INREDA