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. 2018 Oct 23;9:613. doi: 10.3389/fendo.2018.00613

Table 1.

Main events and steps in the history of the discovery of insulin.

Year Major event
1552 BC One of the earliest, if not the earliest, descriptions of diabetes
1675 Thomas Willis coins the expression “diabetes mellitus”
1682–1709 Johann Conrad Brunner observes polydipsia and polyuria in dogs after partial pancreatectomy
1706 John Rollo, Surgeon-General to the Royal Artillery, treats a patient by dietary restriction
1776 Matthew Dobson discovers that urine of diabetic patients is sweet because of excess in sugar
1788 Thomas Crawley reports some clinical cases and links diabetes with pancreatic dysfunctions
1850s French physician Pierre Adolphe Piorry introduces hypercaloric dietary treatment
1857 French Claude Bernard links diabetes with excess glucose production
1860s Claude Bernard reports extensive physiopathological mechanisms of diabetes
1865 Introduction of the concept of “opotherapy” by Ancelet
1869 Paul Langerhans discovers cellular islets within the pancreas Noyes reports a case of retinitis in diabetic patients
1870s Bouchardat postulates a link between pancreas and diabetes
1874 Kussmaul describes the air hunger of ketoacidosis in diabetic patients
1875 Heidenhain demonstrates that extracts of the fresh pancreas possess no proteolytic capacities Nikolaus Friedreich postulates an indirect link between diabetes and pancreatic disorders mediated by sympathtetic nerve ganglia, in primis celiac ganglion and celiac plexus
1876 Étienne Lancereaux describes in depth the clinical differences between diabetes type 1 and type 2
1889–1893 German physiologist Oskar Minkowski and physician Joseph von Mering, show that if the pancreas is removed from a dog, the animal gets diabetes
1892 Battistini and Capparelli try to cure diabetes by injecting pancreatic powder extracts
1893 Laguesse terms the pancreatic cellular islets after Langerhans (“islets of Langerhans”) On December 20, 1893, Dr. P. Watson Williams in Bristol, England, performs the first intervention of pancreas transplant
1898 Joslin proposes opium as treatment of diabetes
1901 Eugene L Opie correlates the hyaline degeneration of the islets of Langerhans with the occurrence of diabetes
1906 Wilhelm Heiberg develops a method for counting the islets of Langerhans and shows that they are low in diabetic patients
1907 J Rennie and T Fraser, from Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, experiment the effect of extracts of pancreatic islets from various teleostei, in particular the Lophius piscatorious, to a sample of 5 diabetic patients
1908 Zuelzer experiments pancreatic extracts termed Acomatol Zuelzer submits an application to the USA office of patents
1909 Forschbach publishes his findings of experiments with the Zuelzer's pancreatic extracts
1909–1910 Introduction of the name “insulin” by Belgian Jean de Meyer
1910 Joseph Pratt published “The relation of the pancreas to diabetes” in JAMA
1912 Zuelzer takes out an American patent entitled “Pancreas Preparation Suitable for the Treatment of Diabetes” (serial number 431,226)
1913 Murlin and Kramer propose that an optimal treatment of diabetic patients should lead to the restoration of respiratory quotient
1914 Rose experiments an alkaline pancreatic extract
1915–1919 Meltzer and Kleiner experiment the effect of a pancreatic solution highly diluted in NaCl
1916 Introduction of the name “insuline” by Sir Edward A Sharpey-Shafer of Edinburgh
1918 Hagedorn and the pharmacist Bierger Norman Jensen publish a micro-method for the determination of blood glucose
1920 Moses Barron publishes his “The relation of the islets of Langerhans to diabetes, with special reference to cases of pancreatic lithiasis”
1921 Dr Frederick Banting and medical student Charles Best perform experiments on the pancreases of dogs in Toronto, Canada Nicolae Paulescu presents his findings at the Rumanian Biological Association and later publish them in the “Reports of the French Society of Biology” and in the “Archives Internationales de Physiologie” Paulesco terms the impaired hormone in diabetic patients as pancreatin
1922 Bovin insulin was first given injected to humans Banting and Best publish their article entitled “The Internal Secretion of the Pancreas” in the “Journal of Laboratory and Clinical Medicine”
1923 Commercialization of Iletin Banting and Macleod are awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine August Krogh brought insulin to Scandinavia Petrén publishes his “Diabetes-studier”
1924 First attempt to graft pancreatic tissue to cure diabetes by the English surgeon Frederick Charles Pybus
1925 One of the earliest, if not the earliest, mentions of the possibility of administering insulin by breathing an aerosol
1926 JJ Abel obtains the first crystallization of insulin
1936 Sir Harold Percival (Harry) Himsworth introduces the concept of insulin resistance Protamine was utilized to produce a slow-release insulin: Hans Christian Hagedorn introduced protamine insulin in Denmark
1949 Production of the first standardized insulin syringes
1951 Development of amorphous lente insulins (IZS)
1955 Sanger characterized the amino acid sequence of human insulin
1957 Introduction of the technique of immunoassay by Solomon Berson and Rosalind Yalow
1959 Sanger is awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry
1960 First prototype of ambulatory insulin pump by Dr. Arnold Kadish
1963 Introduction of insulin pumps
1964 Dorothy Mary Crowfoot-Hodgkin is awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry
1966 First successful transplantation of pancreatic tissue by the group of Kelly
1967 Updike and Hicks realize an implantable miniature electrical transducer of glucose
1970s Continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII)
1972 Introduction of the first standardized U100 insulin
1974 Development of monocomponent MC insulin or single peak insulin Gérard Slama and colleagues in Paris show that a few days of open-loop intravenous (IV) insulin infusion in type 1 diabetes using a portable pump held in a shoulder bag produce good glycaemic control
1975 Synthesis of the first fully synthetic insulin CGP 12831 Lowy reports the clinical effectiveness of using SMBG in pregnancy
1978 David Goeddel and colleagues of the biotechnology firm Genentech use recombinant DNA techniques to produce synthetic “human” insulin Development of the first portable insulin pumps, the Autosyringe, also named ‘Big Blue Brick’
1979 Introduction of the first needle-free insulin delivery system by Derata
1980 Introduction of the “basal-bolus” concept and intensive insulin therapy
1982–1983 Commercialization of the first insulins utilizing rDNA technology, Humulin® R (rapid) and N (NPH, intermediate-acting)
1983 Commercialization of the Nordisk infuser
1985 Novo Nordisk introduces the Insulin Pen delivery system
1988 Gerald Reaven identifies and describes the constellation of symptoms now called metabolic syndrome
1992 Medtronic releases the MiniMed 506 insulin pump
1993 The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial shows the linear relation between the degree of glycemic control and complications Commercialization of the first instant glucose tablets
1996 Approval of Lispro
2000 Approval of Aspart
2004 Approval of Glulisine
2005 Approval of Detemir Approval of the buccal insulin, Oralin® Approval of the venom of the lizard Gila monster, which contains exendin 4, a molecule fostering one of the insulin-releasing pathways
2006 Approval of Exubera, the first inhaled insulin
2008 Approval of the FreeStyle Navigator CGM from Abbott
2013 Rejection of Degludec The University of Cambridge develops an artificial pancreas that pairs the technology of an insulin pump with a continuous glucose monitor
2015 Approval of Degludec Dr Edward Damiano introduces the iLet