| Literature DB >> 29781950 |
Jon Odorico1, James Markmann2, Douglas Melton3, Julia Greenstein4, Albert Hwa5, Cristina Nostro6, Alireza Rezania7, Jose Oberholzer8, Daniel Pipeleers9, Luhan Yang10, Chad Cowan11, Danwei Huangfu12, Dieter Egli13, Uri Ben-David14, Ludovic Vallier15, Shane T Grey16, Qizhi Tang17, Bart Roep18, Camilo Ricordi19, Ali Naji20, Giuseppe Orlando21, Daniel G Anderson22, Mark Poznansky23, Barbara Ludwig24, Alice Tomei19, Dale L Greiner25, Melanie Graham26, Melissa Carpenter27, Giovanni Migliaccio28, Kevin D'Amour7, Bernhard Hering26, Lorenzo Piemonti29, Thierry Berney30, Mike Rickels20, Thomas Kay31, Ann Adams2.
Abstract
Beta cell replacement has the potential to restore euglycemia in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes. Although great progress has been made in establishing allogeneic islet transplantation from deceased donors as the standard of care for those with the most labile diabetes, it is also clear that the deceased donor organ supply cannot possibly treat all those who could benefit from restoration of a normal beta cell mass, especially if immunosuppression were not required. Against this background, the International Pancreas and Islet Transplant Association in collaboration with the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF), and the Helmsley Foundation held a 2-day Key Opinion Leaders Meeting in Boston in 2016 to bring together experts in generating and transplanting beta cells derived from stem cells. The following summary highlights current technology, recent significant breakthroughs, unmet needs and roadblocks to stem cell-derived beta cell therapies, with the aim of spurring future preclinical collaborative investigations and progress toward the clinical application of stem cell-derived beta cells.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29781950 PMCID: PMC6775764 DOI: 10.1097/TP.0000000000002217
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transplantation ISSN: 0041-1337 Impact factor: 4.939