Introduction
Long-term studies strongly suggest that tight control of blood glucose can prevent the development and retard the progression
of chronic complications of type 1 diabetes mellitus. In contrast to conventional insulin treatment, replacement of a patient’s
islets of Langerhans either by pancreas organ transplantation or by isolated islet transplantation is the only treatment to
achieve a constant normoglycemic state and avoiding hypoglycemic episodes, a typical adverse event of multiple daily insulin
injections. However, the cost of this benefit is still the need for immunosuppressive treatment of the recipient with all
its potential risks.
Materials and methods
Islet cell transplantation offers the advantage of being performed as a minimally invasive procedure in which islets can be
perfused percutaneously into the liver via the portal vein. Between January 1990 and December 2004, 458 pancreatic islet transplants
worldwide have been reported to the International Islet Transplant Registry (ITR) at our Third Medical Department, University
of Giessen/Germany.
Results
Data analysis of islet cell transplants performed in the last 5 years (1999–2004) shows at 1 year after adult islet transplantation
a patient survival rate of 97%, a functioning islet graft in 82% of the cases, whereas insulin independence was meanwhile
achieved in 43% of the cases. However, using a novel protocol established by the Edmonton Center/Canada, the insulin independence
rates have improved significantly reaching meanwhile a 50–80% level.
Conclusion
Finally, the concept of islet cell or stem cell transplantation is most attractive, as it offers many perspectives: islet
cell availability could become unlimited and islet or stem cells my be transplanted without life-long immunosuppressive treatment
of the recipient, just to mention two of them.
Keywords Diabetes mellitus - Islet cell transplantation - Tolerance induction - Xenotransplants - Stem cell therapy