Over ten-year insulin independence following single allogeneic islet transplant without T-cell depleting antibody induction

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Abstract

Islet cell transplantation is a promising functional cure for type 1 diabetes; however, maintaining long-term islet graft function and insulin independence is difficult to achieve. In this short report we present a patient with situs inversus, who at the time of islet transplantation had a 26-year history of type 1 diabetes, complicated by hypoglycemic unawareness and severe hypoglycemic events. After a single allogeneic islet transplant of a low islet mass, and despite developing de novo anti-insulin and anti-GAD65 autoantibodies, the patient has remarkably maintained insulin independence with tight glycemic control and normal metabolic profiles for 10 years, after receiving prolonged non-T-cell depleting immunosuppression.

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Williams, J., Jacus, N., Kavalackal, K., Danielson, K. K., Monson, R. S., Wang, Y., & Oberholzer, J. (2018). Over ten-year insulin independence following single allogeneic islet transplant without T-cell depleting antibody induction. Islets, 10(4), 168–174. https://doi.org/10.1080/19382014.2018.1451281

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