Insights from a Successful Case of Intrahepatic Islet Transplantation into a Type 1 Diabetic Patient
Author(s) -
Alberto M. Davalli,
Paola Maffi,
Carlo Socci,
Francesca Sanvito,
Massimo Freschi,
Federico Bertuzzi,
Luca Falqui,
Valerio Di Carlo,
G. Pozza,
Antonio Secchi
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
the journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.206
H-Index - 353
eISSN - 1945-7197
pISSN - 0021-972X
DOI - 10.1210/jcem.85.10.6877
Subject(s) - islet , transplantation , medicine , type 1 diabetes , type 2 diabetes , intensive care medicine , diabetes mellitus , endocrinology , insulin
We report a case of long-term (>4 yr) successful intrahepatic islet transplantation into a type 1 diabetic patient chronically immunosuppressed for a prior kidney graft. The exogenous insulin requirement decreased progressively after transplantation, and insulin treatment was withdrawn at 6 months. Glycosylated hemoglobin levels were in the normal range at 1 and 2 yr (5.3%) and increased slightly above the upper normal limit at 3 and 4 yr (6.3% and 6.4%). Fasting C peptide levels remained stable during the entire follow-up, but the proinsulin to insulin ratios increased dramatically at yr 3. Glycemic levels after an oral glucose tolerance test showed a diabetic profile at 1 yr, a normal profile at 2 yr, and an impaired glucose tolerance profile at 3 yr. Intravenous glucose tolerance test-induced first phase insulin release, present at 1 and 2 yr, disappeared at 3 yr. Diabetes-related autoantibodies (islet cell antibodies, glutamic acid decarboxylase antibodies, and tyrosine phosphatase-like protein antibodies) were undetectable before transplantation and remained so during the entire follow-up. The patient died of myocardial infarction 50 months after transplantation while she was still in good metabolic control (glycosylated hemoglobin, <6.8%) in the absence of exogenous insulin administration. The autoptic liver showed well granulated islets, richly vascularized and without evidence of lympho-mononuclear cell infiltration. The morphometrically extrapolated intrahepaticβ -cell mass was 99.9 mg. In conclusion, this successful islet graft showed a bell-shaped clinical effect, maximal at 2 yr after transplantation, followed by a slow progressive decline. The absence of allo- and autoreactivities against the transplanted islets points to a nonimmune-mediated β-cell loss as the cause of graft functional deterioration.
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