Contributed by Ron Gara| 19 April, 2005  05:57 GMT
 The investigators gradually weaned the recipient off insulin, and she became insulin independent 22 days after the transplantation. She has been insulin independent for 2 months. The donor had no complications, and both women have a healthy tolerance to glucose.
For the first time ever, diabetes has been reversed in a patient through the transplant of islets -- insulin-making cells -- taken from the pancreas of a living donor. The operation is reported in a research letter published online by The Lancet.
Since the success of islet transplantation in 2000 from the organs of dead donors, demand for the procedure has risen substantially and donors soon will be in very short supply, the authors note.
Islet transplantation from living donors represents an alternative approach to expand the potential donor pool, particularly in countries like Japan where the number of people donating their organs after death is low. Two previous attempts at transplantation from living donors have been carried out in the US but were unsuccessful.
Mother Frees Daughter from Injections
In this first successful living-donor case, the donor was the 56-year-old mother of the recipient. She had a compatible blood group and had healthy glucose and insulin concentrations.
The recipient was a 27-year-old woman who had developed insulin-dependent diabetes when she was 15 years old. She had been admitted to hospital to control her frequent hypoglycemic episodes, where her blood sugar levels would drop below normal. She received insulin injections every day in the hospital.
Shinichi Matsumoto of Kyoto University Hospital, Japan, and colleagues isolated islet cells from the donor and transplanted them into the recipient's liver at Kyoto University Hospital on January 19, 2005.
After the operation, the research team monitored the patient's blood glucose. The investigators gradually weaned the recipient off insulin, and she became insulin independent 22 days after the transplantation. She has been insulin independent for 2 months. The donor had no complications, and both women have a healthy tolerance to glucose.
More Viable, More Available
The authors state that islets from living donors are advantageous, because they are more viable and more likely to function properly when compared with islets from the organs of dead donors.
Living donors also overcome the problem of donor shortages for this type of transplant. The transplanted cells were derived from just half of a living pancreas and achieved a similar effect to that achieved from the cells of two or more whole pancreases from dead donors.
The difference in organ requirements probably indicates the improved potency of islets prepared from living donors, state the authors. They stress that long-term follow-up is necessary but believe that the transplant could last up to 5 years. Even if the recipient needs insulin injections in the future, she most likely would be free from hypoglycemic episodes.
The authors also note that because the recipient did not have autoimmune type 1 diabetes, the transplanted islets did not need protection against autoimmune disease. This factor might have been important for the success of the transplantation.
Overcomes Cultural Prohibitions
"From our successful transplantation of living-donor islets for the treatment of unstable diabetes, our recipient achieved and maintained insulin independence after the procedure. We believe that such transplantation of living-donor islets can be an additional option in the treatment of insulin-dependent diabetes," Dr. Matsumoto concludes.
"Until now, islet transplant programs have used cadaveric donors,"
comments Stephanie Amiel of King's College London, UK, in an accompanying editorial. "In Japan, cultural considerations severely restrict the use of cadaveric donors. For a patient with crippling hypoglycemia in such societies, the only realistic donor source would be a living donor." |