4.7 Article

Substance Use Affects Type 1 Diabetes Pancreas Pathology: Implications for Future Studies

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.778912

Keywords

islet amyloid polypeptide; islets of langerhans; pancreatitis; pathology; substance-related disorders; tissue donors; type 1 diabetes mellitus; exocrine pancreas

Funding

  1. nPOD - JDRF [nPOD: 5-SRA-2018-557-Q-R, SCR_014641]
  2. Leona M. & Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust [2018PG-T1D053]
  3. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) [UL1 TR000064]
  4. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01DK123329, U01DK127392, R01DK122160, R01DK123292, UC4DK108132, R01DK120357]
  5. NCATS [KL2TR001429]

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Access to human pancreas samples from organ donors has greatly advanced our understanding of type 1 diabetes pathogenesis. Substance use impacts the pancreata of donors with type 1 diabetes more than controls, resulting in higher rates of acute pancreatitis, chronic pancreatitis, and chronic exocrine changes in type 1 diabetes donors. Further study of the pathophysiology of these changes is needed.
Access to human pancreas samples from organ donors has greatly advanced our understanding of type 1 diabetes pathogenesis; however, previous studies have shown that donors have a high rate of substance use, and its impact on pancreatic histopathology in this disease is not well described. One-hundred-thirty-one type 1 diabetes and 111 control organ donor pancreata from persons 12-89 years of age (mean 29.8 +/- 15.5 years) within the Network for Pancreatic Organ donors with Diabetes (nPOD) were examined for insulin positivity, insulitis, amyloid staining, acute and chronic pancreatitis, and chronic exocrine changes (acinar atrophy, fibrosis, fatty infiltration, or periductal fibrosis); findings were compared by history of substance use. A secondary analysis compared exocrine pancreatic histopathologic findings in type 1 diabetes versus control organ donors regardless of substance use history. We observed a high but congruent rate of substance use in type 1 diabetes and control organ donors (66.4% and 64% respectively). Among donors with type 1 diabetes (but not controls), islet amyloid (OR 9.96 [1.22, 81.29]) and acute pancreatitis (OR 3.2 [1.06, 9.63]) were more common in alcohol users while chronic exocrine changes (OR 8.86 [1.13, 69.31]) were more common in cocaine users. Substance use impacted the pancreata of donors with type 1 diabetes more than controls. Overall, despite similar rates of substance use, acute pancreatitis (15.3% versus 4.5%, p=0.0061), chronic pancreatitis (29.8% versus 9.9%, p=0.0001), and chronic exocrine changes (73.3% versus 36.9%, p<0.0001) were more common in type 1 diabetes donors than controls. Alcohol and/or cocaine use in type 1 diabetes organ donors increases exocrine pancreas pathology and islet amyloid deposition but does not affect insulitis or insulin positivity. Exocrine pathology in type 1 diabetes donors is common, and further study of the pathophysiology of these changes is needed.

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