Islet autotransplantation for treatment of chronic painful pancreatitis in nondiabetic patients reliably establishes normoglycemia and phasic insulin secretion and can achieve prolonged insulin independence. Whether functional transplanted beta-cell reserve is normal after intrahepatic islet transplantation is not known, nor is it known whether conventional measures of insulin secretion accurately reflect the functional beta-cell mass. To determine insulin secretory reserve after islet transplant, we performed studies of glucose potentiation of arginine-induced insulin secretion (GPAIS) in eight recipients of intrahepatic islet autotransplants. All eight subjects (and matched, healthy controls) were studied cross-sectionally 49 +/- 12 months posttransplant, and four subjects were studied pre- and posttransplant. Subjects had received a mean +/- SE of 479,000 +/- 79,000 islets, and all were insulin independent and normoglycemic at the time of study. Acute insulin responses to arginine, glucose, and GPAIS were significantly reduced after islet transplantation in both study groups. Importantly, the magnitudes of these three responses were highly correlated to the mass of islets transplanted (response to glucose: r = 0.84, P < 0.01; response to arginine: r = 0.69, P < 0.05; response to GPAIS = 0.81, P < 0.01). Data from hemipancreatectomized and normal control subjects generally agreed with the regression lines. These findings demonstrate that despite normoglycemia and insulin independence, recipients of intrahepatic islet transplantation have significantly reduced functional beta-secretory reserve and that after islet transplantation, functional beta-cell mass can be estimated by measurements of glucose and arginine-induced insulin responses. Thus, these measurements can be used to estimate the mass and functional capacity of islets surviving intrahepatic transplantation in humans.
OBJECTIVE -Mortality in type 1 diabetic patients with end-stage renal failure is high and dominated by coronary atherosclerotic events. With regard to prognosis, simultaneous transplantation of pancreas and kidney (SPK) may be superior to kidney transplantation alone (KTA) in type 1 diabetic patients, because normalization of blood glucose levels may reduce progression of coronary atherosclerosis and because it is well known that progression of coronary atherosclerosis is one of the major factors that determines clinical prognosis. However, no data are available on progression of coronary atherosclerosis after SPK.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS -We performed an observational angiographic study comparing progression of coronary atherosclerosis, analyzed with quantitative coronary angiography, in patients with (n ϭ 26) and those without (n ϭ 6) a functioning pancreas graft after SPK, to test the hypothesis that normalization of blood glucose levels by SPK may indeed reduce progression of coronary atherosclerosis in type 1 diabetic patients and thereby improve prognosis.RESULTS -Mean follow-up was 3.9 years. Average glucose control was significantly worse for the patients without a pancreas graft than for patients with a functioning pancreas graft: 11.3 (SD 3.5) vs. 5.9 mmol/l (SD 1.1) (P ϭ 0.03). Mean segment diameter loss (progression of diffuse coronary atherosclerosis) was 0.024 mm/year (SD 0.067) in patients with a functioning pancreas graft, compared with 0.044 mm/year (SD 0.038) in patients in whom the pancreas graft was lost. Minimum obstruction diameter loss (progression of focal coronary atherosclerosis) was 0.037 mm/year (SD 0.086) in patients with a functioning pancreas graft compared with 0.061 mm/year (SD 0.038) in patients in whom the pancreas graft was lost. Regression of atherosclerosis occurred in 38% of patients with a functioning pancreas graft compared with 0% of patients of whom the pancreas graft was lost (P ϭ 0.035).CONCLUSIONS -Our study provides, for the first time, evidence that in patients who have undergone SPK, progression of coronary atherosclerosis in patients with a functioning pancreas graft is reduced compared with patients with pancreas graft failure. Our observation is an important part of the explanation for the observed improved mortality rates reported in type 1 diabetic patients with end-stage renal failure after SPK compared with KTA. In light of these findings described above, SPK must to be carefully considered for all diabetic transplant candidates.
Diabetes Care 25:906 -911, 2002D iabetes is an increasing worldwide health problem that often leads to severe medical and psychosocial problems, including blindness, kidney failure, amputation, and death (1). Mortality in type 1 diabetic patients with endstage renal failure is high and dominated by coronary artery disease events (2). Although the possibilities of training and treating particularly young motivated patients with type 1 diabetes are numerous and nowadays rather sophisticated, none are able to normalize the metabol...
Anxiety symptoms are common in dialysis patients and have a large impact on quality of life. The association of anxiety symptoms with adverse clinical outcomes in dialysis patients is largely unknown. This study examined the association of anxiety symptoms with hospitalization and mortality in patients receiving maintenance dialysis.
Infectious diseases after SPK transplantation caused significant morbidity but did not influence either patient or graft survival. A change in prophylactic policy for both SSI as well as recurrent UTI, combined with earlier Foley removal, may lower incidences of these infections.
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