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Multicenter
trial of solitary islet transplantation in type 1 diabetic
patients using the Edmonton protocol of steroid-free immunosuppression
Principal Investigator: James Shapiro, U. Alberta
STATUS: COMPLETED
Summary | Investigators
| News | Background
| Resources
| Publications |
Summary
Objectives: To determine the impact
of the Edmonton Protocol of steroid-free immunosuppression
in a multicenter trial of clinical islet transplantation
in brittle type 1 diabetic patients. The primary objective
will be to confirm that islet allotransplantation is
an appropriate model for studying tolerance strategies,
thus providing a baseline patient cohort for future
interventions and mechanistic studies in tolerance.
The current study will define the logistic infrastructure
for clinical islet transplantation across multiple centers
Standardized protocols will be defined for all aspects
of islet isolation, transplantation, immunosuppression
and detailed follow-up, including shipment of samples,
etc.
Basis/Rationale: Clinical islet transplant
recipients will prove to be key primary subjects for
early evaluation of tolerance induction protocols, as
graft failure (return to insulin therapy) is inconsequential
compared to loss of any other solid organ transplant.
Exciting preliminary data from the Edmonton Group has
demonstrated 100% success in achieving sustained insulin
independence in 6 patients with a median follow-up of
7.2 months using a novel steroid-free immunosuppressive
regimen, representing a dramatic improvement compared
with previous reports from the Islet Transplant Registry.
Significance: This multicenter study
will prove that insulin independence can be achieved
consistently after islet transplantation, providing
a much less invasive approach to control secondary diabetic
complications than whole pancreas transplantation. A
large cohort of islet recipients will provide important
baseline material for the tolerance assay subgroup,
possibly allowing effective withdrawal of immunosuppression
in selected cases, although this is not planned as part
of the existing protocol. Without this important baseline
trial of successful islet transplantation using an immunosuppressive
approach, it will be very difficult to determine a meaningful
outcome in future tolerance trials proposed as a second
stage of this initiative.
Protocol Summary: A total of 9 centres
in the United States, Canada and Europe will perform
solitary islet transplants in 36 type 1 diabetic patients
using the Edmonton protocol of anti-IL2R induction (daclizumab)
with sirolimus and low dose tacrolimus steroid-free
immunosuppression. Islets will be isolated and purified
using standardized protocols and transplanted into the
portal vein by a minimally invasive percutaneous transhepatic
approach. In vitro islet viability assessment
with insulin stimulation response in static glucose
incubation will be completed, in addition to immunohistochemical
cell composition determination. Insulin will be withdrawn
early post-transplant, and metabolic function will be
determined by basal and stimulated C-peptide production,
and responsiveness in vivo with arginine solution.
Participating
Investigators/Clinical Sites

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James Shapiro, University
of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada |
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Camillo Ricordi,
Diabetes Research Institute, University of
Miami, Miami, FL |
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Bernard Hering,
Diabetes Inst. for Immunology and Transplantation,
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN |
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Hugh Auchincloss,
JDF Center for Islet Transplantation, Harvard
Medical School, Boston, MA |
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Kenneth Polansky,
Diabetes Research Training Center, Washington
University, St. Louis, MO |
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Paul Robertson,
Pacific Northwest Research Institute, Seattle,
WA |
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Mathias Brendel,
Islet Transplant Centre, Justis-Liebig University,
Giessen, Germany |
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Antonio Secchi,
San Raffaele Scientific Institute, University
of Milan, Milan, Italy |
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José Oberholzer,
University Hospital, Geneva, Switzerland |
News
& Recent Developments

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Islet Transplants Allow
More Insulin-Independence in Diabetics - Medscape
[go ] |
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Clinical
outcomes with Edmonton Protocol - Diabetes
[go ] |
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President
Clinton announces sites for multicenter trial -
ITN News [open ] |
Background
Articles

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Pancreatic
islet transplantation in the treatment of diabetes
mellitus - Best Pract Res Clin Endocrinol Metab
[go ] |
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Islet Transplantation
in Seven Patients with Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus
Using a Glucocorticoid-Free Immunosuppressive Regimen
- NEJM [go ]
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Resources
& Interesting Links

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Eighty
years after insulin: parallels with modern islet
transplantation - CMAJ [go ] |
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Clinical
islet transplant––state of the art -
Transplant Proc [go ]
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Study Publications

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Shapiro AMJ, Ricordi C, Hering BJ, Auchincloss H, Lindblad R, Robertson RP, Secchi A'Brendel MD, Berney T, Brennan DC, Cagliero E, Alejandro R, Ryan EA, DiMercurio B, Morel P, Polonsky KS, Reems J, Bretzel RG, Bertuzzi F, Froud T, Kandaswamy R, Sutherland DER, Eisenbarth G, Segal M, Preksaitis J, Korbutt GS, Barton FB, Viviano L, Seyfert-Margolis V, Bluestone J, and Lakey JRT (2006): International Multicenter Trial of Islet Transplantation with the Edmonton Protocol in Type 1 Diabetes. NEJM 355: 1318-1330, 2006. [PubMed] [Reprint] |
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Brennan DC, Shannon MB, Koch MJ, Polonsky KS, Desai N, Shapiro J. Portal vein thrombosis complicating islet transplantation in a recipient with the Factor V Leiden mutation. Transplantation 78:172-3, 2004. [PubMed] [Reprint] |
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