This clinical study will evaluate the safety and effectiveness of Gastrin treatment with islet transplantation to help patients with difficult to control type 1 diabetes make insulin again and improve blood sugar control. This study involves two investigational (experimental) products not yet approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as a treatment for any disease: 1. Human allogenic islet cells (islet cells from a deceased, unrelated human donor) 2. Gastrin-17 (Gastrin) - a hormone secreted by the gut
Islet cell transplantation involves transplanting the cells that make insulin from a pancreas of deceased organ donor to a patient with diabetes. Because there is a limited supply of donor islet cells available, this study is testing whether Gastrin injections can help make a fewer number of transplanted islets work better. Gastrin is a natural gut hormone that is present in the pancreas during its development in the embryo but not after birth, and is believed to participate in the formation of the normal pancreas. Several studies have tried to use gastrin to help grow insulin making islet cells in laboratory experiments or after transplanting islets in laboratory animals. In early clinical trials, diabetic patients treated with gastrin and other growth factors required less insulin after 4 weeks of gastrin treatment and the effect lasted more than 12 weeks after stopping treatment, suggesting that gastrin may have increased the number of cells that make insulin. This study will evaluate whether taking Gastrin injections following a single islet transplantation is safe, improves how well the islet transplant works and/or helps increase the number of insulin-making cells in the islets. Qualified participants will receive treatment with a single islet transplant and two rounds of gastrin treatment (twice daily injections for 30 days) with transplant and again 6 months later. Study participants will also take anti-rejection medications (to prevent the body from rejecting the islet cells) and other medications to guard against infection and support their health and/or the health of the transplanted islets. Participants will need to return to City of Hope in Duarte, CA for frequent follow-up visits for one year after transplant.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
20
islet cells transplanted into the portal vein in the liver
Gastrin-17 (or GAST-17) - a gut hormone injected under the skin twice daily for 30 days soon after islet transplant and again 6 months later. Also, anti-rejection medications (to prevent the body from rejecting the islet cells) and other medications to guard against infection and support participant health and/or the health of the transplanted islets.
City of Hope Medical Center
Duarte, California, United States
RECRUITINGProportion of subjects who are insulin independent, free from severe hypoglycemia and have HbA1c less than or equal to 6.5% ("complete response")
Time frame: 1 year post transplant (6 months after second course of Gastrin)
Proportion of subjects who are free of severe hypoglycemic episodes (SHE) and have a HbA1c less than or equal to 7.0% ("partial response").
Time frame: At Month 1, Month 2.5, and Month 6 post start of each Gastrin course
Arthur Riggs Diabetes & Metabolism Research Institute at COH
CONTACT
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