Pancreas‐After‐Islet Transplantation in Nonuremic Type 1 Diabetes: A Strategy for Restoring Durable Insulin Independence

2017 
Islet transplantation offers a minimally-invasive approach for beta cell replacement in diabetic patients with hypoglycemic unawareness. Attempts at insulin independence may require multiple islet re-infusions from distinct donors, thus increasing the risk for allogeneic sensitization. Currently, solid organ pancreas transplant is the only remaining surgical option following failed islet transplantation in the US. However, the immunologic impact of repeated exposure to donor antigens on subsequent pancreas transplantation is unclear. Here we describe a case series of seven patients undergoing solid organ pancreas transplant following islet graft failure, with long-term follow-up of pancreatic graft survival and renal function. Despite highly variable panel-reactive antibody (PRA) levels prior to pancreas transplant (mean 27±35%), all seven patients achieved stable and durable insulin independence with a mean follow-up of 6.7 years. Mean hemoglobin A1c (HgbA1c) values improved significantly from post-islet, pre-pancreas levels (mean 8.1±1.5%) to post-pancreas levels (mean 5.3±0.1%; p=0.0022). Three patients experienced acute rejection episodes successfully managed with thymoglobulin and methylprednisolone, and none of these pre-uremic type 1 diabetic recipients developed Stage 4 or 5 chronic kidney disease postoperatively. These results support pancreas-after-islet (PAI) transplantation with aggressive immunosuppression and protocol biopsies as a viable strategy to restore insulin independence after islet graft failure. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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