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Open Access 11-04-2025 | Type 1 Diabetes | Commentary
The Urgent Need for Breakthrough Therapies and a World Without Type 1 Diabetes
Authors: Lynn Starr, Sanjoy Dutta, Thomas Danne, Stephen R. Karpen, Campbell Hutton, Aaron Kowalski
Published in: Diabetes Therapy | Issue 6/2025
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Despite significant progress, type 1 diabetes (T1D) still results in premature death, significant complications, and a substantial daily burden for those affected. T1D remains a lifelong condition that demands constant vigilance and resilience and has a significant social and economic impact. Individuals with T1D must walk a tightrope to minimize disease-related complications that result from insufficient insulin while also avoiding adverse effects from too much insulin. Achieving this balance is challenging, as diet, activity, medications, physiology, the environment, stress, and many other aspects of daily living all affect glucose levels, often differently from day to day. Persistent challenges of T1D go beyond maintaining glycemic control and include managing long-term complications and preventing potentially life-threating adverse reactions from insulin therapy, and the emotional and cognitive burdens that often lead to diabetes distress and burnout. The T1D community—researchers, sponsors, clinicians, those living with T1D, and advocates—must look beyond managing symptoms of T1D and aim for better treatments and to bring cures. Emerging therapies need clear and efficient regulatory pathways, and new solutions are needed to address ongoing regulatory challenges. The perspectives of people with T1D must be front and center in research and regulatory decision-making. Through the collective efforts of the T1D community, the urgent needs of those with T1D can be met, and T1D can be made a thing of the past.