Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism, Department of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Division of Metabolism, Endocrinology, and Nutrition, Department of Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington.
Endocr Rev. 2019 Apr 1;40(2):631-668. doi: 10.1210/er.2018-00154.
Pancreatic islet transplantation has become an established approach to β-cell replacement therapy for the treatment of insulin-deficient diabetes. Recent progress in techniques for islet isolation, islet culture, and peritransplant management of the islet transplant recipient has resulted in substantial improvements in metabolic and safety outcomes for patients. For patients requiring total or subtotal pancreatectomy for benign disease of the pancreas, isolation of islets from the diseased pancreas with intrahepatic transplantation of autologous islets can prevent or ameliorate postsurgical diabetes, and for patients previously experiencing painful recurrent acute or chronic pancreatitis, quality of life is substantially improved. For patients with type 1 diabetes or insulin-deficient forms of pancreatogenic (type 3c) diabetes, isolation of islets from a deceased donor pancreas with intrahepatic transplantation of allogeneic islets can ameliorate problematic hypoglycemia, stabilize glycemic lability, and maintain on-target glycemic control, consequently with improved quality of life, and often without the requirement for insulin therapy. Because the metabolic benefits are dependent on the numbers of islets transplanted that survive engraftment, recipients of autoislets are limited to receive the number of islets isolated from their own pancreas, whereas recipients of alloislets may receive islets isolated from more than one donor pancreas. The development of alternative sources of islet cells for transplantation, whether from autologous, allogeneic, or xenogeneic tissues, is an active area of investigation that promises to expand access and indications for islet transplantation in the future treatment of diabetes.
胰岛移植已成为治疗胰岛素缺乏型糖尿病的β细胞替代治疗的一种既定方法。胰岛分离、胰岛培养和胰岛移植受者移植后管理技术的最新进展,使患者的代谢和安全性结果得到了显著改善。对于因胰腺良性疾病而需要全胰或次全胰切除术的患者,从患病胰腺中分离胰岛并进行肝内自体胰岛移植,可以预防或改善手术后糖尿病;对于以前经历过疼痛性复发性急性或慢性胰腺炎的患者,生活质量得到了极大改善。对于 1 型糖尿病或胰源性(3c 型)糖尿病胰岛素缺乏型患者,从已故供体胰腺中分离胰岛并进行肝内同种异体胰岛移植,可以改善严重低血糖,稳定血糖波动性,并维持目标血糖控制,从而提高生活质量,且通常无需胰岛素治疗。由于代谢益处取决于移植后存活的胰岛数量,因此自体胰岛的受者仅限于接受从其自身胰腺中分离的胰岛数量,而异体胰岛的受者可能会接受来自多个供体胰腺的胰岛。用于移植的胰岛细胞的替代来源的开发,无论是来自自体、同种异体还是异种组织,都是一个活跃的研究领域,有望在未来的糖尿病治疗中扩大胰岛移植的应用范围和适应证。