Aims/hypothesis:
Islet transplantation is a minimally invasive approach to curing Type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus. Success has
recently been reported in patients receiving solitary islet transplants but the outcome in patients receiving islets together
with, or after, kidney transplants has been limited and unpredictable.
Methods:
Here we report successful islet transplantation in a cohort of 15 patients with Type I diabetes who were followed for at
least 1 year after islet transplantation, after having already received kidney allografts because of end-stage nephropathy.
Results:
C-peptide after transplantation was higher than 0.17 nmol/l in all 15 recipients, reflecting the absence of primary non-function.
Insulin requirement was reduced by over 50 % in all but one patient, and insulin independence was achieved in 10 (66 %) recipients,
five of whom now have stable, prolonged insulin independence, well controlled fasting glycaemia, a substantial first-phase
and normal second-phase response to glucose, normal insulin sensitivity (HOMA analyses) and HbA1 c of under 6.2 % (33, 26, 18, 13 and 12 months after transplantation respectively). Of importance for patient management, an
assessment of fasting blood glucose and proinsulin values following overnight withdrawal of insulin administration one month
after transplantation was a potent predictor of insulin independence, and could be used to decide patients who should have
further islet preparations.
Conclusion/interpretation:
These findings support the use of islet transplantation as a cure for Type I diabetes in patients with severe complications.
[Diabetologia (2002) 45: 77–84]
Keywords Islet transplantation - kidney transplantation - primary non-function - insulin release - proinsulin release - intravenous glucose tolerance test - arginine test - insulin resistance.
Received: 23 April 2001 and in revised form: 30 July 2001