| Literature DB >> 19046214 |
Abstract
Type 1 diabetes mellitus results from the progressive and specific autoimmune destruction of insulin-secreting pancreatic B-cells, which develops over a period of years and continues after the initial clinical presentation. The ultimate goal of therapeutic intervention is prevention or reversal of the disease by the arrest of autoimmunity and by preservation/restoration of B-cell mass and function. Recent clinical trials of antigen-specific or non-specific immune therapies have proved that modulation of islet specific autoimmunity in humans and prevention of insulin secretion loss in the short term after the onset of disease is achievable. The identification of suitable candidates for therapy, appropriate dosage and timing, specificity of intervention and the side-effect profile are crucial for the success of any approach. Considering the complexity of the disease, it is likely that a rationally designed approach of combined immune-based therapies that target suppression of B-cell specific autoreactivity and maintenance of immune tolerance, coupled with islet regeneration or replacement of the destroyed B-cell mass, will prove to be most effective in causing remission/reversal of disease in a durable fashion.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 19046214 PMCID: PMC2701557 DOI: 10.1111/j.1464-5491.2008.02556.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabet Med ISSN: 0742-3071 Impact factor: 4.359
The most important environmental factors which possibly contribute to the increased incidence of Type 1 diabetes [1–4]
| Environmental factors | Hypothesis |
|---|---|
| Viral infections (e.g. enteroviruses) | Viral hypothesis |
| Exposure to certain food constituents (gluten; toxic agents such as nitrite/nitrate) | Dietary hypothesis |
| Increased hygiene; lack of childhood infections | Hygiene hypothesis |
| Rapid growth in early childhood | Accelerator hypothesis |
New therapeutic interventions for Type 1 diabetes in humans
| Aim of intervention | Type of intervention | Pros/advantages | Cons/disadvantages | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prevention of B-cell loss | Immune-based therapy | Antigen specific | ||
| Insulin, HSP60, GAD65 (and their peptides) | Safe Induction imunoregulatory mechanisms Moderate clinical benefit (preservation of C-peptide over a limited time period) in intervention trials | No/partial success in prevention trials so far | ||
| Non-antigen specific | ||||
| Immunosuppresants | Induce depletion/inactivation of pathogenic cells | Limited/no effect; short- and long-term side effects | ||
| Nicotinamide | Safe Protection against B-cell death | No efficacy for diabetes prevention | ||
| Anti-CD3 mAb | Induction of tolerance by apoptosis/ anergy of activated T cells and expansion of Tregs No chronic immunosuppression | Side effects (moderate cytokine release syndrome; transient reactivation of EBV; potential anti-idiotypic antibodies) | ||
| Prevention of loss of insulin production > 1 year in intervention trials | Reoccurrence of B-cell failure | |||
| Regeneration/restoration of B-cell mass | Transplantation | Pancreas/islet cells | Feasible Improved glycaemic control Preferable in simultaneous renal graft (when immunosuppression is already necessary) | Modest success of the procedure; continuous immunosuppression is needed Islet isolation procedure—technically challenging; costly; lack of sufficient pancreata (multiple donors per recipient) Whole pancreas—more invasive surgery |
| Pharmacologic agents (e.g. GLP-1 receptor agonists, DPP-4 inhibitors) | Approved for Type 2 diabetes therapy Eliminate need for surgical procedures Presumably stimulates B-cell regeneration | Definite effect of B-cell regeneration not yet fully evaluated Long-term safety needs further evaluation | ||
| Stem cells/genetic therapy | Good potential source of surrogate insulin producing cells | Still in preclinical research phase | ||
DPP-4, dipeptidyl peptidase 4; EBV, Epstein–Barr virus; GLP-1, glucagon-like peptide 1; mAb, monoclonal antibody; Tregs, regulatory T cells; HSP, heat shock protein; GAD, glutamic acid decaboxylase.
Figure 1Potential therapeutic strategies for prevention/reversal of Type 1 diabetes. These could be contemplated in different stages during the natural history of diabetes: in individuals with high genetic risk; for prevention of autoimmunity, in antibody-positive individuals; for prevention of disease onset (primary prevention) or after clinical onset; for preservation of residual pancreatic B-cell mass and function (secondary and tertiary prevention). Ideally, immune-based therapies should be administered before onset of Type 1 diabetes (or shortly afterwards), when there is still some residual B-cell mass that could be rescued. Methods of B-cell replacement are used when there is insufficient B-cell mass that could assure sufficient endogenous insulin levels necessary for maintenance of good glycaemic control.