4.7 Article

Beta cell function during rapamycin monotherapy in long-term type 1 diabetes

Journal

DIABETOLOGIA
Volume 54, Issue 2, Pages 433-439

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00125-010-1959-6

Keywords

C-peptide; Humans; Long-term type 1 diabetes; Rapamycin

Funding

  1. Telethon Italy
  2. Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation [JT01Y01, 6-2006-1098]
  3. European Union [FP7-HEALTH-202013]
  4. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [FZ111]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Type 1 diabetes is considered non-reversible at end-stage disease when there is no measurable insulin production. However, there are indications that insulin-producing beta cells could be present or return if autoimmunity could be controlled. We therefore sought to determine whether immunosuppression therapy can reinstate beta cell function in patients with long-term type 1 diabetes. We examined pancreatic beta cell function in 22 patients with long-term type 1 diabetes (median disease duration 27 years), who had been receiving rapamycin monotherapy (0.1 mg/kg; target trough levels 8-10 ng/ml; 26-314 days) as pre-conditioning for islet transplantation. As control, beta cell function was measured in 14 patients (median disease duration 17 years) who were waiting for an islet transplant without rapamycin pre-conditioning. Fasting C-peptide increased from < 0.03 nmol/l (0.0066 nmol/l, interquartile range [IQR] 0.0003-0.023) at baseline to 0.039 nmol/l (IQR 0.0066-0.096) at end of rapamycin monotherapy (p < 0.005). In 12 patients, fasting C-peptide increased to > 0.076 nmol/l (C-peptide responders). Exogenous insulin requirement decreased from 0.64 U/kg daily (IQR 0.56-0.72) to 0.57 U/kg (IQR 0.45-0.70; p = 0.01), but this reduction was significant only in the 12C-peptide-responsive patients. Rapamycin monotherapy was also associated with a decrease in insulin antibody titre (median decrease 110 to 35.9 U/ml; p < 0.001) and fasting serum proinsulin (median decrease 0.51 to 0.28 pmol/l; p = 0.001). All variables remained unchanged in the 14 control patients. Therapies to reinstate beta cell function may be applicable to patients with long-term C-peptide-negative type 1 diabetes. ClinicalTrial.gov NCT01060605 This study was funded by Telethon Italy and the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JT01Y01 and grant no. 6-2006-1098) and the European Union (DIAPREPP Project, FP7-HEALTH-202013). E. Bonifacio is funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (FZ111).

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available