Clinical islet transplantation in type 1 diabetes mellitus: results of Australia's first trial.
نویسندگان
چکیده
OBJECTIVE To determine whether pancreatic islet transplantation can control diabetes and prevent severe life-threatening hypoglycaemia. DESIGN, SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS A single-arm observation study of six patients undergoing islet transplantation. All patients had had type 1 diabetes mellitus for over 5 years and documented episodes of repeated severe hypoglycaemia. Islets were isolated from donor pancreases digested by Liberase. Separated islets were infused into the recipient's liver via the portal vein. Patients were immunosuppressed with daclizumab, sirolimus and tacrolimus. The transplants were performed at Westmead Hospital, NSW, between October 2002 and February 2005. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Normal blood glucose control without administration of exogenous insulin; demonstration of islet function and abolition of hypoglycaemia. RESULTS Five of the patients received two islet infusions, and the sixth was withdrawn after one infusion following a portal vein thrombosis. Three patients became insulin-independent, with excellent glycaemic control. Two had islet function with circulating C-peptide, improved glycaemic control, reduced insulin requirement and abolition of severe hypoglycaemia. However, over a 2-year period, graft function deteriorated. Recipients who were initially insulin free remained C-peptide positive but required supplemental insulin. Complications included one postoperative bleed, two portal vein thromboses (which resolved completely), presumed recurrence of tuberculosis in one patient, and deterioration in renal function in one patient. CONCLUSIONS Islet transplantation is effective at improving glycaemic control and hypoglycaemia unawareness in the short to medium term. However, problems with long-term safety of immunosuppression, islet-induced thrombosis and early detection of loss of islet function remain to be addressed.
منابع مشابه
Islet Transplantation in Type I Diabetes Mellitus
For most patients with type I diabetes, insulin therapy and glucose monitoring are sufficient to maintain glycemic control. However, hypoglycemia is a potentially lethal side effect of insulin treatment in patients who are glycemically labile or have hypoglycemia-associated autonomic failure [1]. For those patients, an alternative therapy is beta cell replacement via pancreas or islet transplan...
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Background: Islet transplantation could be an ideal alternative treatment to insulin therapy for type 1 diabetes Mellitus (T1DM). This clinical and experimental field requires a model that covers problems such as requiring a large number of functional and viable islets, the optimal transplantation site, and the prevention of islet dispersion. Hence, the methods of choice for isolation of functi...
متن کاملIs islet transplantation a realistic approach to curing diabetes?
Since the report of type 1 diabetes reversal in seven consecutive patients by the Edmonton protocol in 2000, pancreatic islet transplantation has been reappraised based on accumulated clinical evidence. Although initially expected to therapeutically target long-term insulin independence, islet transplantation is now indicated for more specific clinical benefits. With the long-awaited report of ...
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متن کاملComment on: Robertson (2010) Islet transplantation a decade later and strategies for filling a half-full glass. Diabetes;59:1285-1291.
In his Perspectives in Diabetes (1), Robertson asked whether islet transplantation achievements should be considered a partial failure or a partial success. This question, which would sound naïve for bone marrow, skin, or organ transplantation, is actually more than germane for islet transplantation. So far, no study has formally compared the outcomes of patients with type 1 diabetes receiving ...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- The Medical journal of Australia
دوره 184 5 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2006