Tschopp J M, Brutsche M H, Frey J G, Spiliopoulos A, Nicod L, Rochat T, Morel P
Centre Valaisan de Pneumologie, Montana, Switzerland.
Chest. 1997 Dec;112(6):1685-7. doi: 10.1378/chest.112.6.1685.
Over a period of years, insulin-dependent diabetes and respiratory insufficiency developed in a 35-year-old patient with end-stage cystic fibrosis. After waiting more than 4 years while receiving maintenance treatment with continuous liquid O2 and nasal ventilation, the patient underwent double-lung and pancreatic islet cell transplantation. Subsequently, the patient has enjoyed a normal life with full employment and much better control of his diabetes. Pancreatic islet cell transplantation is a simple and innocuous technique easily added to the end of lung transplantation. These new pancreatic cells, although locally injected, are still secreting more than 2 years later as assessed by repeated C-peptide measurements.