Litcius/Paper detail

Cell Therapy for Type 1 Diabetes: From Islet Transplantation to Stem Cells

Valeria Sordi, Laura Monaco, Lorenzo Piemonti

2022Hormone Research in Paediatrics10 citationsDOI

Abstract

The field of cell therapy of type 1 diabetes is a particularly interesting example in the scenario of regenerative medicine. In fact, β-cell replacement has its roots in the experience of islet transplantation, which began 40 years ago and is currently a rapidly accelerating field, with several ongoing clinical trials using β cells derived from stem cells. Type 1 diabetes is particularly suitable for cell therapy as it is a disease due to the deficiency of only one cell type, the insulin-producing β cell, and this endocrine cell does not need to be positioned inside the pancreas to perform its function. On the other hand, the presence of a double immunological barrier, the allogeneic one and the autoimmune one, makes the protection of β cells from rejection a major challenge. Until today, islet transplantation has taught us a lot, pioneering immunosuppressive therapies, graft encapsulation, tissue engineering, and test of different implant sites and has stimulated a great variety of studies on β-cell function. This review starts from islet transplantation, presenting its current indications and the latest published trials, to arrive at the prospects of stem cell therapy, presenting the latest innovations in the field.

Topics & Concepts

TransplantationStem cellIsletIslet cell transplantationMedicineCell therapyType 1 diabetesRegenerative medicineImmunologyDiabetes mellitusBioinformaticsInternal medicineBiologyEndocrinologyCell biologyPancreatic function and diabetesDiabetes Management and ResearchDiabetes and associated disorders