Diabetes Mellitus Type 1
Diabetes mellitus type 1 (Type 1 diabetes, Type I diabetes, T1D, T1DM, IDDM, juvenile diabetes) is a form of diabetes mellitus. Type
1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease that results in the permanent destruction of insulin-producing beta cells of the pancreas. Type 1 is lethal
unless treatment with exogenous insulin via injections replaces the missing hormone, or a functional replacement for the destroyed pancreatic
beta cells is provided (such as via a pancreas transplant).
Type 1 diabetes (formerly known as "childhood", "juvenile" or "insulin-dependent" diabetes) is not exclusively a childhood problem: the adult
incidence of Type 1 is noteworthy — many adults who contract Type 1 diabetes are misdiagnosed with Type 2 due to the misconception of Type 1 as
a disease of children — and since there is no cure, all children with Type 1 diabetes will grow up to be adults with Type 1 diabetes.
There is currently no preventive measure that can be taken against type 1 diabetes. Most people affected by type 1 diabetes are otherwise healthy
and of a healthy weight when onset occurs, but they can lose weight quickly and dangerously, if not diagnosed in a relatively short amount of time.
Diet and exercise cannot reverse or prevent type 1 diabetes. Although there are clinical trials ongoing that aim to find methods of preventing or
slowing its development, so far none have proven successful, at least on a permanent basis.
The most useful laboratory test to distinguish Type 1 from Type 2 diabetes is the C-peptide assay, which is a measure of endogenous insulin production
since external insulin (to date) has included no C-peptide. However, C-peptide is not absent in Type 1 diabetes until insulin production has fully
ceased, which may take months. The presence of anti-islet antibodies (to Glutamic Acid Decarboxylase, Insulinoma Associated
Peptide-2 or insulin), or lack of insulin resistance, determined by a glucose tolerance test, would also be suggestive of Type 1. As opposed to
that, many Type 2 diabetics still produce some insulin internally, and all have some degree of insulin resistance.
Testing for GAD 65 antibodies has been proposed as an improved test for differentiating between Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes.
Current Research
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Pathophysiology
The cause of Type 1 diabetes is still not fully understood. Some theorize that Type 1 diabetes could be a virally induced autoimmune response.
Autoimmunity is a condition where one's own immune system "attacks" structures in one's own body either destroying the tissue or decreasing its
functionality. In the proposed scenario, pancreatic beta cells in the Islets of Langerhans are destroyed or damaged sufficiently to abolish endogenous
insulin production. This etiology makes type 1 distinct from type 2 diabetes mellitus. It should also be noted that the use of insulin in a
patient's diabetes treatment protocol does not render them as having type 1 diabetes, the type of diabetes a patient has is determined only by
disease etiology. The autoimmune attack may be triggered by reaction to an infection, for example by one of the viruses of the Coxsackie virus
family or German measles, although the evidence is inconclusive.
This vulnerability is not shared by everyone, for not everyone infected by these organisms develops Type 1 diabetes. This has suggested a genetic
vulnerability and there is indeed an observed inherited tendency to develop Type 1. It has been traced to particular HLA
genotypes, though the connection between them and the triggering of an auto-immune reaction is poorly understood. Wide-scale genetic studies have
shown links between genetic vulnerabilities for type 1 diabetes and Multiple Sclerosis and Crohn's Disease.
Some researchers believe that the autoimmune response is influenced by antibodies against cow's milk proteins. A large retrospective controlled
study published in 2006 strongly suggests that infants who were never breastfed had a risk for developing Type 1 diabetes twice that of infants
who were breastfed for at least three months. The mechanism, if any, is not understood. No connection has been established between autoantibodies,
antibodies to cow's milk proteins, and Type 1 diabetes. A subtype of Type 1 (identifiable by the presence of antibodies against beta cells)
typically develops slowly and so is often confused with Type 2. In addition, a small proportion of Type 1 cases have the hereditary condition
maturity onset diabetes of the young (MODY) which can also be confused with Type 2.
Vitamin D in doses of 2000 IU per day given during the first year of a child's life has been connected in one study in Northern Finland (where
intrinsic production of Vitamin D is low due to low natural light levels) with an 80% reduction in the risk of getting Type 1 diabetes later
in life.
Some suggest that deficiency of Vitamin D3 (one of several related chemicals with Vitamin D activity) may be an important pathogenic factor in
Type 1 diabetes independent of geographical latitude.
Some chemicals and drugs specifically destroy pancreatic cells. Vacor (N-3-pyridylmethyl-N'-p-nitrophenyl urea), a rodenticide introduced in the
United States in 1976, selectively destroys pancreatic beta cells, resulting in Type 1 diabetes after accidental or intentional ingestion. Vacor
was withdrawn from the U.S. market in 1979. Zanosar is the trade name for streptozotocin, an antibiotic and antineoplastic agent used in chemotherapy
for pancreatic cancer, that kills beta cells, resulting in loss of insulin production.
Other pancreatic problems, including trauma, pancreatitis or tumors (either malignant or benign), can also lead to loss of insulin production. The
exact cause(s) of Type 1 diabetes are not yet fully understood, and research on those mentioned, and others, continues.
In December 2006, researchers from Toronto Hospital for Sick Children revealed research that shows a link between type 1 diabetes and the immune and
nervous system. Using mice, the researchers discovered that a control circuit exists between insulin-producing cells and their associated sensory
(pain-related) nerves. It's being suggested that faulty nerves in the pancreas could be a cause of type 1 diabetes.
Treatment
Type 1 is treated with insulin replacement therapy — usually by injection or insulin pump, along with attention to dietary management, typically
including carbohydrate tracking, and careful monitoring of blood glucose levels using Glucose meters.
Untreated Type 1 diabetes can lead to one form of diabetic coma, diabetic ketoacidosis, which can be fatal. At present, insulin treatment must be
continued for a lifetime; this will change if better treatment, or a cure, is discovered. Continuous glucose monitors have been developed which
can alert patients to the presence of dangerously high or low blood sugar levels, but the lack of widespread insurance coverage has limited the
impact these devices have had on clinical practice so far.
In more extreme cases, a pancreas transplant can help restore proper glucose regulation. However, the surgery and accompanying immunosuppression
required is considered by many physicians to be more dangerous than continued insulin replacement therapy and is therefore often used only as a
last resort (such as when a kidney must also be transplanted or in cases where the patient's blood glucose levels are extremely volatile).
Experimental replacement of beta cells (by transplant or from stem cells) is being investigated in several research programs and may become
clinically available in the future. Thus far, beta cell replacement has only been performed on patients over age 18, and with tantalizing successes
amidst nearly universal failure.
Pancreas Transplantation
Pancreas transplants are generally recommended if a kidney transplant is also necessary. The reason for this is that introducing a new kidney
requires taking immunosuppressive drugs anyway, and this allows the introduction of a new, functioning pancreas to a patient with diabetes without
any additional immunosuppressive therapy. However, pancreas transplants alone can be wise in patients with extremely labile type 1 diabetes mellitus.
Artificial Pancreas
Islet Cell Transplantation
Less invasive than a pancreas transplant, islet cell transplantation is currently the most highly used approach in humans to temporarily cure type
1 diabetes.
In one variant of this procedure, islet cells are injected into the patient's liver, where they take up residence and begin to produce insulin.
The liver is expected to be the most reasonable choice because it is more accessible than the pancreas, and the islet cells seem to produce insulin
well in that environment. The patient's body, however, will treat the new cells just as it would any other introduction of foreign tissue. The
immune system will attack the cells as it would a bacterial infection or a skin graft. Thus, the patient also needs to undergo treatment involving
immunosuppressants, which reduce immune system activity.
Recent studies have shown that islet cell transplants have progressed to the point that 58% of the patients in one study were insulin independent
one year after the operation. Ideally, it would be best to use islet cells which will not provoke this immune reaction, but investigators are
also looking into placing islets into a protective coating which enables insulin to flow out while protecting the islets from white blood cells.
Prevalence
It is estimated that about 5%–10% of North American diabetes patients have type 1. The fraction of type 1 in other parts of the world differs;
this is likely due to both differences in the rate of type 1 and differences in the rate of other types, most prominently type 2. Most of this
difference is not currently understood. Variable criteria for categorizing diabetes types may play a part.
Research Foundations
The Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF) is the major charitable organization in the USA and Canada devoted to type 1 diabetes research.
JDRF's mission is to cure type 1 diabetes and its complications through the support of research. Since its founding in 1970, JDRF has contributed
more than $1.16 billion to diabetes research, including more than $137 million in FY 2007. In FY2007, the Foundation funded 700 centers, grants
and fellowships in 20 countries.
The International Diabetes Federation is a worldwide alliance of over 160 countries to address diabetes research and treatment. The American
Diabetes Association funds some work on type 1 but devotes much of its resources to type 2 diabetes due to the increasing prevalence of the latter
type. Diabetes Australia is involved in promoting research and education in Australia on both type 1 and type 2 diabetes. The Canadian Diabetes
Association is also involved in educating, researching, and sustaining sufferers of Type 1 Diabetics in Canada. Pacific Northwest Diabetes
Research Institute conducts clinical and basic research on type 1 and type 2 diabetes.
Cure
As of 2008, there is no known cure for diabetes mellitus type 1 used by modern medical institutes or hospitals. There is ongoing research on various
approaches to curing diabetes type 1.
Diabetes type 1 is caused by the destruction of sufficient beta cells in the body; these cells, which are found in the Islets of Langerhans in
the pancreas, produce and secrete insulin, the single hormone responsible for allowing glucose to enter from the blood into cells, and also the
hormone amylin, another hormone required for glucose homeostasis, as well as the counterregulatory hormone glucagon which is secreted by the
alpha cells. Hence, the phrase "curing diabetes type 1" means "causing a maintenance or restoration of the endogenous ability of the body to
produce insulin in response to the level of blood glucose" and full restoration of the counterregulatory function. This section does not deal with
approaches other than that (for instance, closed-loop integrated glucometer/insulin pump products), which could potentially increase the
quality-of-life for some who have diabetes type 1, and may by some be termed "artificial pancreas". Instead, it only deals with such approaches
for thoroughly curing the underlying condition of diabetes type 1, by enabling the body to endogenously, in vivo, produce insulin in response to
the level of blood glucose.
Reversion
Encapsulation Approach
A biological approach to the artificial pancreas is to implant bioengineered tissue containing islet cells, which would secrete the amounts of
insulin, amylin and glucagon needed in response to sensed glucose.
When islet cells have been transplanted via the Edmonton protocol, insulin production (and glycemic control) was restored, but at the expense of
immunosuppression. Encapsulation of the islet cells in a protective coating has been developed to block the imSmune response to transplanted cells,
which relieves the burden of immunosuppression and benefits the longevity of the transplant.
One concept of the bio-artificial pancreas uses encapsulated islet cells to build an islet sheet which can be surgically implanted to function as
an artificial pancreas.
This islet sheet design consists of:
- An inner mesh of fibers to provide strength for the islet sheet;
- Islet cells, encapsulated to avoid triggering a proliferating immune response, adhered to the mesh fibers;
- A semi-permeable protective layer around the sheet, to allow the diffusion of nutrients and secreted hormones;
- A protective coating, to prevent a foreign body response resulting in a fibrotic reaction which walls off the sheet and causes failure of the islet cells.
Islet sheet with encapsulation research is pressing forward with large animal studies at the present, with plans for human clinical trials within a
few years.
Islet Cell Regeneration Approach
Research undertaken at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston Masschusetts from 2001 and 2003 demonstrated a protocol to reverse type 1 diabetes
in non-obese diabetic mice (a frequently used animal model of type 1 diabetes mellitus). Three other institutions have had similar results, published
in the March 24, 2006 issue of Science. A fourth study by the National Institutes of Health further confirmed the approach, and also sheds light on the
biological mechanisms involved.
Other researchers, most notably Dr. Aaron I. Vinik of the Strelitz Diabetes Research Institute of Eastern Virginia Medical School and a former
colleague, Dr. Lawrence Rosenberg (now at McGill University in Montreal, Canada) discovered in a protein they refer to as INGAP, which stands for
Islet Neogenesis Associated Protein back in 1997. INGAP is a gene that is responsible for regenerating the islets that make insulin and other important
hormones in the pancreas.
INGAP has something of a checkered history as far as commercialization is concerned. Although it appears promising, the rights to commercialize it
have traded hands a repeatedly over, having once been owned by Procter & Gamble Pharmaceuticals, but P&G later dropped it. The rights were then
acquired by GMP Companies. More recently, Kinexum Metabolics, Inc. has since sublicensed INGAP Peptide from GMP Companies for further clinical trials.
Kinexum has continued development under the guidance of Dr. G. Alexander Fleming, a well-known authority on metabolic drug development, who headed
diabetes drug review at the FDA for over a decade. As of 2008, the protein had undergone Phase 2 Human Clinical Trials, and the developers were
investigating the results. At the American Diabetes Association's 68th Annual Scientific Sessions in San Francisco, Kinexum announced a Phase 2 human
clinical trial with a combination therapy, consisting of DiaKine's Lisofylline (LSF) and Kinexum's INGAP peptide, which is expected to begin in late
2008. The trial will be unique in that patients who are beyond the 'newly diagnosed' period will be included in the study. Most current trials seeking
to treat people with type 1 diabetes do not include those with established disease.
Stem Cells Approach
Research is being done at several locations in which islet cells are developed from stem cells.
In January 2006, a team of South Korean scientists has grown pancreatic beta cells, which can help treat diabetes, from stem cells taken from the
umbilical cord blood of newborn babies.
In April 2007, it was reported by the Times Online that 15 young Brazilian patients diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes were able to naturally produce
insulin once again after undergoing mild chemotherapy to temporarily weaken their immune systems and then injection of their own stem cells. This
allowed the pancreatic beta cells to produce insulin. Since white blood cells were blocking the pancreas from producing insulin, Dr. Voltarelli and
colleagues killed the immune cells, allowing the pancreas to secrete insulin once more.
However, there were no control subjects, which means that all of the processes could have been completely or partially natural. Secondly, no theory
for the mechanism of cure has been promoted. It is too early to say whether the results will be positive or negative in the long run.
Gene Therapy Approach
Technology for gene therapy is advancing rapidly such that there are multiple pathways possible to support endocrine function, with potential
to practically cure diabetes.
- Gene therapy can be used to manufacture insulin directly: an oral medication, consisting of viral vectors containing the insulin sequence,
is digested and delivers its genes to the upper intestines. Those intestinal cells will then behave like any viral infected cell, and
will reproduce the insulin protein. The virus can be controlled to infect only the cells which respond to the presence of glucose,
such that insulin is produced only in the presence of high glucose levels. Due to the limited numbers of vectors delivered, very few
intestinal cells would actually be impacted and would die off naturally in a few days. Therefore by varying the amount of oral
medication used, the amount of insulin created by gene therapy can be increased or decreased as needed. As the insulin producing
intestinal cells die off, they are boosted by additional oral medications.
- Gene therapy might eventually be used to cure the cause of beta cell destruction, thereby curing the new diabetes patient before the
beta cell destruction is complete and irreversible.
- Gene therapy can be used to turn duodenum cells and duodenum adult stem cells into beta cells which produce insulin and amylin naturally.
By delivering beta cell DNA to the intestine cells in the duodenum, a few intestine cells will turn into beta cells, and subsequently
adult stem cells will develop into beta cells. This makes the supply of beta cells in the duodenum self replenishing, and the beta
cells will produce insulin in proportional response to carbohydrates consumed.
Yonsei University Study
Scientists in the South Korean university of Yonsei have, in 2000, succeeded in reversing diabetes in mice and rats. Using a viral vector, a DNA
encoding the production of an insulin analog was injected to the animals, which remained non-diabetic for at least the eight months duration of
the study.
Nanotechnology Approach
Under the nanotechnological approach to curing diabetes type 1, many "nanobots" would be injected into the patient's bloodstream. These nanobots
would be able to synthesize insulin, and to secrete it according to the level of glucose they would sense.
Prevention
"Immunization" Approach
If a biochemical mechanism can be found that prevents the immune system from attacking beta cells, it may be administered to prevent commencement
of diabetes type 1. The way several groups are trying to achieve this is by causing the activation state of the immune system to change from Th1
state (“attack” by killer T Cells) to Th2 state (development of new antibodies). This Th1-Th2 shift occurs via a change in the type of cytokine
signaling molecules being released by regulatory T-cells. Instead of pro-inflammatory cytokines, the regulatory T-cells begin to release cytokines
that inhibit inflammation. This phenomenon is commonly known as "acquired immune tolerance".
DiaPep277
A substance designed to cause lymphocyte cells to cease attacking beta cells, DiaPep277 is a peptide fragment of a larger protein called HSP60.
Given as a subcutaneous injection, its mechanism of action involves a Th1-Th2 shift. Clinical success has been demonstrated in prolonging the
"honeymoon" period for people who already have type 1 diabetes. The product is currently being tested in people with latent autoimmune diabetes
of adults (LADA). Ownership of the drug has changed hands several times over the last decade. In 2007, Clal Biotechnology Industries (CBI) Ltd., an
Israeli investment group in the field of life sciences, announced that Andromeda Biotech Ltd., a wholly owned subsidiary of CBI, signed a Term Sheet
with Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. to develop and commercialize DiaPep277.
Intra-Nasal Insulin
There is pre-clinical evidence that a Th1-Th2 shift can be induced by administration of insulin directly onto the immune tissue in the nasal cavity.
This observation has led to a clinical trial, called INIT II, which began in late 2006, based in Australia and New Zealand.
Denise Faustman Research
Tumor necrosis factor-alpha, or TNF-a, is part of the immune system. It helps the immune system discern between self and non-self. People with
type 1 diabetes are deficient in this substance. Dr. Faustman theorizes that giving Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG), an inexpensive drug, would
have the same impact as injecting diabetic mice with Freund's Adjuvant, which stimulates TNF-a production. TNF-a kills the white blood cells
responsible for destroying beta cells, and thus prevents, or reverses diabetes. She has reversed diabetes in laboratory mice with this techniqe,
but was only able to receive funding for subsequent research from The Iaccoca Foundation, founded by Lee Iacocca in honor of his late wife, who died
from diabetes complications. Human trials are set to begin in 2008.
Diamyd
Diamyd is the name of a vaccine being developed by Diamyd Medical. Injections with GAD65, an autoantigen involved in type 1 diabetes, has in clinical
trials delayed the destruction of beta cells for at least 30 months, without serious adverse effects. Patients treated with the substance showed
higher levels of regulatory cytokines, thought to protect the beta cells. Phase III trials are under way in the USA and in Europe.
Entities Involved in Research
This section is an incomplete list of mainly commercial companies but also other entities, namely governmental institutions and individual persons,
actively involved in research towards finding a cure to diabetes type 1.
It does not list research funds, hospitals in which research is undertaken, etc., but only the industrious, actual developers of such products.
Entities are listed alphabetically along with their status of research in that field, so that also entities which ceased research into finding a
cure to diabetes type 1 may be listed.
- Amylin Pharmaceuticals – is working toward finding a cure, and has a drug on the market called Symlin (pramlintide acetate) that helps in treating Type 1 diabetes
- Cerco Medical – Present status: Unknown
- Denise Faustman – Present status: Working on immune modification
- DeveloGen – Present status: Developing DiaPep 277
- Diamyd Medical – Present status: Developing GAD65-based vaccine (phase III application approved by the FDA)
- Encelle – Present status: On hold, awaiting decision on moving forward into encapsulated beta cell transplantation.
(adapted from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_1_diabetes)
Authors: Zipris D.
Department of Pediatrics, Barbara Davis Center for Childhood Diabetes, University of Colorado, Aurora, Colorado 80045-6511, USA. danny.zipris@uchsc.edu
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Over the last 2 decades, studies addressing mechanisms of type 1 diabetes have focused primarily on the role of T lymphocytes in disease mechanisms. Recent investigations, however, suggest that the innate immune system plays a key role in promoting the response of autoreactive T cells triggering type 1 diabetes. The discovery of toll-like receptors in the 1990s has led to a better understanding of signaling pathways involved in initiating innate immune pathways and how these pathways may be associated with mechanisms leading to autoimmune disease. This review focuses on recent studies on the role of Toll-like receptors and innate pathways in triggering type 1 diabetes. RECENT FINDINGS: Data from animal models of type 1 diabetes provide strong support to the hypothesis that Toll-like receptor-induced innate signaling pathways are involved in the proinflammatory process leading to autoimmune diabetes. Studies performed in peripheral blood cells and sera from patients with type 1 diabetes indicate that aberrant innate functions might exist in such patients, but the relevance of these alterations to the mechanism leading to type 1 diabetes is currently unclear. SUMMARY: The discovery that innate signaling pathways are involved in the mechanism that may trigger islet inflammation and destruction holds great promise for the identification of new innate signaling molecules that could be targeted to specifically inhibit the autoimmune process to prevent autoimmune diabetes.
Journal: Curr Opin Endocrinol Diabetes Obes. 2008 Aug;15(4):326-31.
Authors: Wenzlau JM, Hutton JC, Davidson HW.
Barbara Davis Center for Childhood Diabetes, University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center, Aurora, Colorado 80045, USA.
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The beta-cell-specific zinc transporter isoform 8 (SLC30A8) has recently emerged both as a major autoantigenic target of type 1 diabetes and also as a genetic marker for type 2 diabetes. We examine the hypothesis that the cell specificity and cellular localization of this granule membrane protein are significant factors in its contribution to the pathogenesis of these diseases. RECENT FINDINGS: Both type 1 diabetes and type 2 diabetes are associated with islet functional failure and both diseases may be linked to stress responses and changes in the secretory pathway, which lead to cell apoptosis and thus directly to reduction of beta-cell mass or activation of underlying autoimmunity. In both cases, the common polymorphism at aa 325 has been implicated in disease, in type 1 diabetes by determining the autoantibody epitope specificity and in type 2 diabetes through association with altered beta-cell mass and impaired secretion. SUMMARY: Functional studies of the transporter will be key to understanding the role of ZnT8 in type 2 diabetes. Investigation of the cellular immune response to ZnT8 will be essential in evaluating its contribution to type 1 diabetes. Measurement of autoantibodies to ZnT8 takes us a step closer to detection of prediabetes in the general population.
Journal: Curr Opin Endocrinol Diabetes Obes. 2008 Aug;15(4):315-20.
Authors: Brown RJ, Sinaii N, Rother KI.
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, Bethesda, Maryland, USA. brownrebecca@mail.nih.gov
OBJECTIVE: To determine the time course of changes in glucagon and insulin secretion in children with recently diagnosed type 1 diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Glucagon and C-peptide concentrations were determined in response to standard mixed meals in 23 patients with type 1 diabetes aged 9.4 +/- 4.6 years, beginning within 6 weeks of diagnosis, and every 3 months thereafter for 1 year. RESULTS: Glucagon secretion in response to a physiologic stimulus (mixed meal) increased by 37% over 12 months, while C-peptide secretion declined by 45%. Fasting glucagon concentrations remained within the normal (nondiabetic) reference range. CONCLUSIONS: Postprandial hyperglucagonemia worsens significantly during the first year after diagnosis of type 1 diabetes and may represent a distinct therapeutic target. Fasting glucagon values may underestimate the severity of hyperglucagonemia. The opposing directions of abnormal glucagon and C-peptide secretion over time support the link between dysregulated glucagon secretion and declining beta-cell function.
Journal: Diabetes Care. 2008 Jul;31(7):1403-4.
Authors: Chase HP, Arslanian S, White NH, Tamborlane WV.
Barbara Davis Center, University of Colorado, Aurora, CO.
OBJECTIVES: To compare long-acting insulin glargine (Lantus) with intermediate-acting insulin (neutral protamine Hagedorn [NPH]/Lente) when used as the basal component of a multiple daily injection (MDI) regimen with prandial insulin lispro (Humalog) in adolescents with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM). STUDY DESIGN: This was an active-controlled, randomized, open-label, sex-stratified, 2-arm, parallel-group comparison of once-daily insulin glargine with twice-daily NPH/Lente in an MDI regimen. Changes in glycated hemoglobin A1C (A1C), occurrence of hypoglycemia, and adverse events were assessed in 175 patients (age 9 to 17 years) with T1DM. RESULTS: The overall mean change in A1C from baseline to week 24 was similar in the 2 groups: insulin glargine (n = 76), -0.25% +/- 0.14%; NPH/Lente (n = 81), 0.05% +/- 0.13% (P = .1725). However, an analysis of covariance, adjusting for baseline A1C, revealed a strong study arm effect on the slopes of the regression lines, indicating that the reduction in A1C was significantly greater with insulin glargine in those patients with higher baseline A1C values. The rate of confirmed glucose values <70 mg/dL was higher in the patients receiving insulin glargine (P = .0298). No differences in the rate of severe hypoglycemia (P = .1814) or the occurrence of glucose levels <50 mg/dL (P = .82) or <36 mg/dL (P = .32) were found between the 2 groups. CONCLUSIONS: Insulin glargine is well tolerated in MDI regimens for pediatric patients with T1DM and may be more efficacious than NPH/Lente in those with elevated A1C.
Journal: J Pediatr. 2008 Jun 25.
Authors: Abdi R, Fiorina P, Adra CN, Atkinson M, Sayegh MH.
Transplantation Research Center, Renal Division, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. rabdi@rics.bwh.harvard.edu
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are pluripotent stromal cells that have the potential to give rise to cells of diverse lineages. Interestingly, MSCs can be found in virtually all postnatal tissues. The main criteria currently used to characterize and identify these cells are the capacity for self-renewal and differentiation into tissues of mesodermal origin, combined with a lack in expression of certain hematopoietic molecules. Because of their developmental plasticity, the notion of MSC-based therapeutic intervention has become an emerging strategy for the replacement of injured tissues. MSCs have also been noted to possess the ability to impart profound immunomodulatory effects in vivo. Indeed, some of the initial observations regarding MSC protection from tissue injury once thought mediated by tissue regeneration may, in reality, result from immunomodulation. Whereas the exact mechanisms underlying the immunomodulatory functions of MSC remain largely unknown, these cells have been exploited in a variety of clinical trials aimed at reducing the burden of immune-mediated disease. This article focuses on recent advances that have broadened our understanding of the immunomodulatory properties of MSC and provides insight as to their potential for clinical use as a cell-based therapy for immune-mediated disorders and, in particular, type 1 diabetes.
Journal: Diabetes. 2008 Jul;57(7):1759-67.
Authors: Hilliard ME, Goeke-Morey M, Cogen FR, Henderson C, Streisand R.
Children's National Medical Center, The Catholic University of America, and The George Washington University Medical School.
OBJECTIVE: To examine family and individual psychosocial, medical, and demographic factors associated with improved diabetes-related quality of life (QOL) after transitioning to the insulin pump among youth with type 1 diabetes. METHOD: Fifty-three parent-child dyads completed questionnaires on four occasions prior to and following this medical regimen change, assessing QOL, family environment, depressive and anxiety symptoms, and medical and demographic information. Trajectories of change in QOL were analyzed using multilevel modeling. RESULT: Psychosocial, medical, and demographic characteristics were associated with QOL prior to pump-start. Elements of children's QOL significantly improved after the transition, and improvement was predicted by psychosocial, medical, and demographic characteristics. CONCLUSION: Results indicate that individual and contextual factors may play a role in QOL as children transition to the insulin pump. Findings may guide efforts to support families through this challenging time and potentially inform candidacy for transition to the pump.
Journal: J Pediatr Psychol. 2008 Jun 27
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