Srinivasan P, Huang G C, Amiel S A, Heaton N D
King's College London School of Medicine at King's College Hospital, Institute of Liver Studies and Diabetes Research Group, King's College Hospital, London, UK.
Postgrad Med J. 2007 Apr;83(978):224-9. doi: 10.1136/pgmj.2006.053447.
People with type 1 diabetes have normal exocrine pancreatic function, making islet cell rather than whole organ transplantation an attractive option. Achieving insulin independence in type 1 diabetes was the perceived goal of islet cell transplantation. The success of the Edmonton group in achieving this in a selected group of type 1 patients has led to renewed optimism that this treatment could eventually replace whole organ pancreas transplantation. However the long-term results of this treatment indicate that insulin independence is lost with time in a significant proportion of patients, although they may retain glycaemic stability. In this context, the indications for islet cell transplantation, which have evolved over the last 5 years, indicate that the patients who benefit most are those who experience severe hypoglycaemic reactions despite optimal insulin therapy. This review will summarise the history of islet cell transplantation, islet isolation techniques, the transplant procedure, immunosuppressive therapy, indications for islet cell transplantation, current clinical trials, the early UK islet cell transplant experience using the Edmonton protocol, and some of the challenges that lie ahead.
1型糖尿病患者的胰腺外分泌功能正常,这使得胰岛细胞移植而非全器官移植成为一个有吸引力的选择。实现1型糖尿病患者的胰岛素自主分泌曾被视为胰岛细胞移植的目标。埃德蒙顿研究小组在部分1型患者中成功实现了这一目标,这让人们重新燃起了乐观情绪,认为这种治疗最终可能会取代全器官胰腺移植。然而,这种治疗的长期结果表明,尽管部分患者可能保持血糖稳定,但随着时间的推移,相当一部分患者会失去胰岛素自主分泌能力。在此背景下,过去5年中不断演变的胰岛细胞移植适应症表明,受益最大的患者是那些尽管接受了最佳胰岛素治疗仍会发生严重低血糖反应的患者。本综述将总结胰岛细胞移植的历史、胰岛分离技术、移植程序、免疫抑制治疗、胰岛细胞移植的适应症、当前的临床试验、英国早期使用埃德蒙顿方案进行胰岛细胞移植的经验以及未来面临的一些挑战。