| Literature DB >> 22723582 |
Franca B Barton1, Michael R Rickels, Rodolfo Alejandro, Bernhard J Hering, Stephen Wease, Bashoo Naziruddin, Jose Oberholzer, Jon S Odorico, Marc R Garfinkel, Marlon Levy, Francois Pattou, Thierry Berney, Antonio Secchi, Shari Messinger, Peter A Senior, Paola Maffi, Andrew Posselt, Peter G Stock, Dixon B Kaufman, Xunrong Luo, Fouad Kandeel, Enrico Cagliero, Nicole A Turgeon, Piotr Witkowski, Ali Naji, Philip J O'Connell, Carla Greenbaum, Yogish C Kudva, Kenneth L Brayman, Meredith J Aull, Christian Larsen, Tom W H Kay, Luis A Fernandez, Marie-Christine Vantyghem, Melena Bellin, A M James Shapiro.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe trends of primary efficacy and safety outcomes of islet transplantation in type 1 diabetes recipients with severe hypoglycemia from the Collaborative Islet Transplant Registry (CITR) from 1999 to 2010. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: A total of 677 islet transplant-alone or islet-after-kidney recipients with type 1 diabetes in the CITR were analyzed for five primary efficacy outcomes and overall safety to identify any differences by early (1999-2002), mid (2003-2006), or recent (2007-2010) transplant era based on annual follow-up to 5 years.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22723582 PMCID: PMC3379615 DOI: 10.2337/dc12-0063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Care ISSN: 0149-5992 Impact factor: 19.112
Recipient, donor, islet, and immunosuppression characteristics, based on numbers with data
Figure 1Islet allograft recipients (N = 677) registered in CITR according to type of transplant (n per year; top), induction immunosuppression at first infusion (% by year; center), and maintenance immunosuppression at first infusion (% by year; bottom). ITA, islet transplant alone.
Figure 2A: Rates of insulin independence after allogeneic islet infusion (islet transplant alone and IAK), annually after last infusion. Left: By era (P = 0.02). Right: By induction immunosuppression category (P < 0.01). B: Durability of graft function (basal C-peptide ≥0.3 ng/mL) after the last infusion, by era (P < 0.001; left). The immediate drop at time 0 is occurrences of primary nonfunction (i.e., C-peptide never ≥0.3 ng/mL). In the most recent era, 95% of those who ever achieved insulin independence (II) retained graft function through 3 years after last infusion compared with 70% for those who never achieved II (P < 0.001; right). C: Percentage of patients with HbA1c <6.5% or drop by two percentage points (P = 0.03; left); and absence of severe hypoglycemic events regardless of complete graft failure (P = NS by era; there were insufficient data from 2007–2010; right). D: The percentage with HbA1c <6.5% or drop by 2% increases with increasing C-peptide level (P < 0.001; left), as does absence of severe hypoglycemic events (P < 0.001; right), annually after the last infusion. (A high-quality color representation of this figure is available in the online issue.)
Factors predictive of insulin independence after last infusion
Figure 3A: Mortality by era (P = 0.49). B: Life-threatening events by era (P = 0.01). C: Incidence of any adverse event (AE) in year 1 of first infusion (P = 0.02 by era). D: CKD-EPI calculated glomerular filtration rate, by era.