Islet transplantation improves vascular diabetic complications in patients with diabetes who underwent kidney transplantation: a comparison between kidney-pancreas and kidney-alone transplantation1
- 1 April 2003
- journal article
- conference paper
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Transplantation
- Vol. 75 (8) , 1296-1301
- https://doi.org/10.1097/01.tp.0000061788.32639.d9
Abstract
The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of islet transplantation on patient survival and diabetic vascular complications. Thirty-seven type 1 uremic diabetic kidney transplant patients underwent islet transplantation (KI group). Uremic type 1 diabetic kidney-pancreas (KP group, n=162), kidney-alone (KD group, n=42) transplant patients, and uremic type 1 diabetic patients still on hemodialysis (HD+DM group, n=196) constituted the control groups for survival and endothelial morphology. Patient survival was similar in the KI and KP groups and higher than in the HD+DM group (P <0.05). Patients experiencing long-term islet function (KI-successful [KI-s], n=24) showed a better survival (100%, 100%, and 90%) than those in the KI group who lost islet function (KI-unsuccessful [KI-u], n=13) (84%, 75%, and 45%) at 1, 4 and 7 years, respectively (P =0.02). The cardiovascular death rate for the KI group (18%) was similar to the KD group (19%) but lower when the KI-s group is considered alone (5%), and showed a cardiovascular death rate similar to the KP group (8%). The KI-s group showed a good metabolic profile, with reduction of exogenous insulin requirement and persistent C-peptide secretion, as compared with the KI-u group. The endothelial morphology was evaluated with a skin biopsy obtained in all groups. The KI-s and the KP groups demonstrated decreased signs of endothelial injury compared with the KI-u and HD+DM groups. The KI group showed a better atherothrombotic profile than the HD+DM group, with higher levels of natural anticoagulant protein. Successful islet transplantation improves survival, atherothrombotic profile, and endothelial morphology in uremic type 1 diabetic kidney transplant patients.This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Intrahepatic Islet Transplantation in Type 1 Diabetic Patients Does Not Restore Hypoglycemic Hormonal Counterregulation or Symptom Recognition After Insulin IndependenceDiabetes, 2002
- Cardiovascular outcomes after kidney–pancreas and kidney–alone transplantation11See Editorial by Langone and Helderman, p. 2035.Kidney International, 2001
- Effects of Kidney-Pancreas Transplantation on Atherosclerotic Risk Factors and Endothelial Function in Patients With Uremia and Type 1 DiabetesDiabetes, 2001
- Metabolic Effects of Restoring Partial β-Cell Function After Islet Allotransplantation in Type 1 Diabetic PatientsDiabetes, 2001
- Prevention of Diabetes for up to 13 Years by Autoislet Transplantation After Pancreatectomy for Chronic PancreatitisDiabetes, 2001
- Association of glycaemia with macrovascular and microvascular complications of type 2 diabetes (UKPDS 35): prospective observational studyBMJ, 2000
- Successful Islet Transplantation for Patients with Diabetes — Fact or Fantasy?New England Journal of Medicine, 2000
- Islet Transplantation in Seven Patients with Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus Using a Glucocorticoid-Free Immunosuppressive RegimenNew England Journal of Medicine, 2000
- Epidemiology of insulin resistance and its relation to coronary artery diseaseThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1999
- Islet transplantation in IDDM patientsDiabetologia, 1997