Insulet Corp. received the greenlight from EU regulators to combine its Omnipod 5 automated insulin delivery (AID) system with Abbott Laboratories Freestyle Libre 2 Plus sensor to treat individuals aged two years and older with type 1 diabetes.
U.S. FDA clearance of Mobi pumped up Tandem Diabetes Care Inc. on Tuesday. The miniaturized insulin pump is indicated for individuals with diabetes, aged 6 years and up, with the FDA action boosting Tandem’s share price from $26.41 to $29.20 in morning trading before falling back to $27.12 by the end of the day.
The recently concluded American Diabetes Association’s (ADA) 83rd Scientific Sessions continued to build powerful use cases for continuous glucose monitors in an ever-wider population and to highlight the value of automated insulin delivery (AID) systems that are getting ever-closer to duplicating the function of a natural pancreas. In addition to the news from Medtronic plc and Dexcom Inc. BioWorld covered earlier this week, Abbott Laboratories, Tandem Diabetes Care Inc. and Insulet Corp. also presented bright projections for future performance.
Beta Bionics Inc. received U.S. FDA clearance for its Ilet Bionic Pancreas, an automated insulin-delivery (AID) system that calculates 100% of insulin doses without requiring carb counting or manual boluses. The system—a pump plus dosing decision software—is indicated for people aged six years and up with type 1 diabetes.
Insulet Corp. once again broke records with a nearly 50% increase in Omnipod revenues in U.S. in the first quarter and a 32% increase in revenue from the tubeless insulin delivery device worldwide. In an unusual move following such positive quarterly results, the company simultaneously announced a major shake-up in the leadership team, with multiple senior members moving to new positions starting July 1. The latest round of musical chairs comes almost exactly a year after the last at the Insulet, when Founder, President and CEO Shacey Petrovic stepped down and Jim Hollingshead assumed the top spot.
Dexcom Inc. posted a 19% increase in first quarter revenues compared to 2022 boosted by a stunning 27% organic growth in sales outside the U.S. With clearance of the G7 device in hand, another record set in new patient starts and coverage of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) systems by CMS effective this month, the year is shaping up to be quite rosy for the diabetes device company.
Insulet Corp. has taken the lead in the race to bring insulin delivery systems to individuals with type 2 diabetes with U.S. FDA clearance of its Omnipod Go device. The delivery system is adapted for use by adults who use once-a-day basal insulin. The company plans to roll out Go in 2024.
Two tough years have taken a toll on Medtronic plc with a warning letter for its diabetes unit, a reorganization that will spin off its respiratory, patient care and renal groups and layoffs of an undisclosed number of employees that began last week. The announcement late Friday of the U.S. FDA approval of the Minimed 780G insulin pump system could be a turning point for the company that brings it back into the competition for the growing diabetes market.
Abbott Laboratories received U.S. FDA clearance for the Freestyle Libre 2 and Freestyle Libre 3 continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) sensors for integration with automated insulin delivery (AID) systems. AID systems automatically adjust and administer insulin via a pump based on blood glucose levels determined by the sensors. Abbott said it was partnering with multiple AID manufacturers in the U.S. and Europe.
Insulet Corp. went on a buying spree this week with the acquisition of the assets of Automated Glucose Control LLC (AGC) and Bigfoot Biomedical Inc.'s automated insulin delivery (AID) patents. The Bigfoot and AGC deals each rang in at $25 million.