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NHS Approves First Drug to Delay Type 1 Diabetes Onset

July 19, 2026

The National Health Service has approved an immunotherapy drug designed to delay the progression of type 1 diabetes, marking the first time the NHS has made such a treatment available to patients.

The drug extends the period before children and adults require insulin therapy by approximately three years, according to health officials. Patients who receive the treatment postpone the need for regular insulin injections, a cornerstone of type 1 diabetes management.

Type 1 diabetes develops when the immune system attacks insulin-producing cells in the pancreas. The new immunotherapy works by modifying immune system function to slow this process rather than replacing insulin after cells die.

The approval represents a shift in how the NHS approaches type 1 diabetes care. Rather than managing the disease after it fully develops, the treatment targets the underlying immune dysfunction in the earlier stages of the condition.

Health officials indicated the drug provides a window of additional time for patients to adjust to living with diabetes and to prepare for eventual insulin therapy. During this extended period, some patients may manage blood sugar levels through diet and other interventions.

The drug becomes available through NHS prescriptions, making it accessible to eligible patients across England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland without direct out-of-pocket costs for treatment.

Type 1 diabetes affects roughly 400,000 people in Britain and requires lifelong insulin therapy once the disease becomes established. The condition accounts for approximately 10 percent of all diabetes cases in the country, with the remainder classified as type 2.

Experts have monitored the development of immunotherapy approaches for type 1 diabetes over the past decade. Clinical trials demonstrated the drug's ability to extend the asymptomatic phase of the disease, though researchers noted that the treatment does not reverse or cure type 1 diabetes.

The approval followed review by the NHS's medication appraisal committee, which evaluated clinical evidence, cost-effectiveness, and patient access considerations. The organization determined the drug met criteria for NHS funding.

Eligibility criteria for the treatment remain under development, with NHS officials expected to release detailed guidance on which patients qualify for prescription in coming weeks.

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