Learning Insulin-Glucose Dynamics in the Wild

Abstract

We develop a new model of insulin-glucose dynamics for forecasting blood glucose in type 1 diabetics. We augment an existing biomedical model by introducing time-varying dynamics driven by a machine learning sequence model. Our model maintains a physiologically plausible inductive bias and clinically interpretable parameters — e.g., insulin sensitivity — while inheriting the flexibility of modern pattern recognition algorithms. Critical to modeling success are the flexible, but structured representations of subject variability with a sequence model. In contrast, less constrained models like the LSTM fail to provide reliable or physiologically plausible forecasts. We conduct an extensive empirical study. We show that allowing biomedical model dynamics to vary in time improves forecasting at long time horizons, up to six hours, and produces forecasts consistent with the physiological effects of insulin and carbohydrates.

Cite

Text

Miller et al. "Learning Insulin-Glucose Dynamics in the Wild." Proceedings of the 5th Machine Learning for Healthcare Conference, 2020.

Markdown

[Miller et al. "Learning Insulin-Glucose Dynamics in the Wild." Proceedings of the 5th Machine Learning for Healthcare Conference, 2020.](https://mlanthology.org/mlhc/2020/miller2020mlhc-learning/)

BibTeX

@inproceedings{miller2020mlhc-learning,
  title     = {{Learning Insulin-Glucose Dynamics in the Wild}},
  author    = {Miller, Andrew C. and Foti, Nicholas J. and Fox, Emily},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of the 5th Machine Learning for Healthcare Conference},
  year      = {2020},
  pages     = {172-197},
  volume    = {126},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/mlhc/2020/miller2020mlhc-learning/}
}