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The Future of Clinical Islet Transplantation in the United States
- Source :
- OBM Transplantation. 5
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- LIDSEN Publishing Inc, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Clinical islet transplantation was first realized over four decades ago at the University of Minnesota. Autologous islet transplantation is now widely recognized as a treatment to prevent diabetes in patients after pancreas excision and is offered at major transplant centers throughout the United States and the world. Type 1 diabetes represents a much larger demographic in which islet transplantation may benefit patients. Allogeneic islet transplantation can now offer similar outcomes to pancreas transplantation in a subset of patients with labile type 1 diabetes with less risk than whole organ transplantation. It is recognized as a standard of care in nations around the world but not in the United States, despite the important developmental role US scientists and physicians have played. Early reports of islet transplantation focused on insulin independence that proved to diminish over time. However, regardless of insulin status, islet transplantation provides benefits ranging from improved quality of life to reduction in diabetic complications. A National Institutes of Health sponsored multi-center Phase 3 Clinical Trial (CIT-07) demonstrated safety and efficacy, although the Food and Drug Administration chose to consider islets as a biologic that requires licensure, which makes offering the procedure in the clinic very challenging. Until regulations can be brought into communion with international standards, allogeneic islet transplantation in the United States is unlikely to match international levels of success and once promising programs are left to wither on the vine. Food and Drug Administration approval would open the door for third party medical reimbursement and allow many patients the opportunity to enjoy better health and quality of life. Establishment of clinical islet transplantation for type 1 diabetes would lead to optimizations in procedures making it more efficacious and cost effective while offering support for ongoing islet xenotransplantation studies that could bring islet transplantation to even more patients.
- Subjects :
- endocrine system
medicine.medical_specialty
Type 1 diabetes
geography
geography.geographical_feature_category
business.industry
medicine.medical_treatment
Pancreas transplantation
medicine.disease
Islet
Organ transplantation
Transplantation
Quality of life
Diabetes mellitus
Medicine
business
Intensive care medicine
Reimbursement
Subjects
Details
- Volume :
- 5
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- OBM Transplantation
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........2cfcbc05a8e14d56cd2b9fb6329d3589