The goal of this trial is to gain initial clinical experience regarding the safety and efficacy of treating type I diabetes in people who have received a kidney transplant by transplanting islets into a new transplant site in the stomach (gastrointestinal submucosa). A total of 6 patients will be enrolled in the study and followed for a period of up to 3 years after the last islet transplant.
Pancreatic islet transplantation offers a minimally invasive approach to restore normoglycemia in type 1 diabetics while avoiding the hypoglycemic complications observed with intensive insulin therapy and the surgical complications associated with pancreas transplantation. Although significant progress has been made in clinical islet transplantation, overall outcomes remain suboptimal since many patients lose insulin independence a few years after transplantation and multiple donors are usually needed to achieve independence. The cause of this progressive loss of function is multifactorial, but mounting evidence suggests that much of the islet loss after transplant is directly related to the intraportal transplant site that is used in clinical islet transplantation. Intravascular infusion of the islets triggers a severe,non-specific inflammatory response (immediate blood-mediated inflammatory reaction, IBMIR) which destroys at least 50% of the islet mass. The engraftment of the surviving islets is further compromised by the relatively hypoxic portal venous environment, and the infused islets are exposed to potentially toxic levels of immunosuppressive agents being absorbed from the gut into the portal circulation. Together, these characteristics contribute to early as well as late loss of islet function after transplantation. The gastrointestinal submucosa is a newly described transplant site that can support islet engraftment while avoiding many of the drawbacks associated with intraportal infusion. In addition, this site is easily accessible via upper endoscopy and the submucosal injection procedure is safe and technically straightforward. The aim of this prospective, single-center trial is to provide initial clinical experience regarding the safety and efficacy of endoscopic gastric and duodenal submucosal islet transplantation in type I diabetic patients with kidney allografts. A total of 6 patients will be recruited into the trial. The investigators will follow the standardized islet manufacturing protocols and the thymoglobulin-based induction immunosuppressive regimen developed by the Clinical Islet Transplant consortium (CIT). Outcomes will include safety measures, glycemic control and insulin use, metabolic assessments of graft function, allo/auto-immune responses, and protocol biopsies to assess graft rejection/inflammation. The investigators believe that this novel approach to islet transplantation has the potential to significantly improve current islet transplantation outcomes by enhancing islet engraftment and long-term function.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
3
Transplantation of islets into the gastrointestinal submucosa
Transplantation of islets into the gastrointestinal submucosa
University of California, San Francisco
San Francisco, California, United States
Insulin independence
off insulin therapy for at least 1 week and all of the following criteria are met: * HbA1c \< 6.5% or a \> 2.5% decrease from baseline; * Daily fasting capillary glucose should not exceed 140 mg/dL (7.8 mmol/L) more than 3 times in the past week; * 2-hour post-prandial capillary glucose should not exceed 180 mg/dl (10.0 mmol/L) more than three times in the past week; * Fasting plasma glucose \< 126 mg/dL (7.0 mmol/L); if the fasting plasma glucose is \> 126 mg/dL (7.0 mmol/L), it must be confirmed in an additional one out of two measurements; Protocol Version 4.0 December 19, 2017 39 * Evidence of endogenous insulin production defined as fasting or stimulated C-peptide \>0.5 ng/mL (0.16 nmol/L).
Time frame: 75 days after the first transplant
Insulin independence
off insulin therapy for at least 1 week and all of the following criteria are met: * HbA1c \< 6.5% or a \> 2.5% decrease from baseline; * Daily fasting capillary glucose should not exceed 140 mg/dL (7.8 mmol/L) more than 3 times in the past week; * 2-hour post-prandial capillary glucose should not exceed 180 mg/dl (10.0 mmol/L) more than three times in the past week; * Fasting plasma glucose \< 126 mg/dL (7.0 mmol/L); if the fasting plasma glucose is \> 126 mg/dL (7.0 mmol/L), it must be confirmed in an additional one out of two measurements; Protocol Version 4.0 December 19, 2017 39 * Evidence of endogenous insulin production defined as fasting or stimulated C-peptide \>0.5 ng/mL (0.16 nmol/L).
Time frame: 1 year after the first transplant
Insulin independence
off insulin therapy for at least 1 week and all of the following criteria are met: * HbA1c \< 6.5% or a \> 2.5% decrease from baseline; * Daily fasting capillary glucose should not exceed 140 mg/dL (7.8 mmol/L) more than 3 times in the past week; * 2-hour post-prandial capillary glucose should not exceed 180 mg/dl (10.0 mmol/L) more than three times in the past week; * Fasting plasma glucose \< 126 mg/dL (7.0 mmol/L); if the fasting plasma glucose is \> 126 mg/dL (7.0 mmol/L), it must be confirmed in an additional one out of two measurements; Protocol Version 4.0 December 19, 2017 39 * Evidence of endogenous insulin production defined as fasting or stimulated C-peptide \>0.5 ng/mL (0.16 nmol/L).
Time frame: 1 year after the last transplant
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Changes in HbA1c
Proportion of subjects with an HbA1c \<7.0% and free of severe hypoglycemic events from day 28 to 365 after the first and final islet transplant
Time frame: From day 28 to 365
Changes (reduction) in insulin requirements
decrease of insulin dose as compared to pre-transplantation of islets
Time frame: up to 5 years
Incidence of adverse events
the incidence of AEs related to the transplant procedure or immunosuppression
Time frame: up to 5 years