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Pig Cells Treat Diabetes Patients

Scientists claim to have all but eliminated the risk of infection from the animal transplants.

By Michael Day

Monday, July 27, 2009

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Australian researchers have begun injecting insulin-producing cells taken from healthy pigs into people with type 1 diabetes in an attempt to cure their condition.

Protective coating: Insulin cell clusters (visible in green) are shown here inside gel capsules.
Credit: Living Cell Techologies

Crucially, the scientists claim to have all but eliminated the risk of infection from the animal transplants. Transplanted cells are encased in a porous gel that protects them from attack by the host immune system, doing away with the need for harmful immuno-supressive medication.

The trials follow preliminary tests in which two volunteers with type 1 diabetes, an autoimmune disease that results in the destruction of the insulin-producing islet cells in the pancreas. Insulin is vital for controlling blood-sugar levels, and patients with the disease currently face life-long insulin injections to prevent life-threatening surges in blood-glucose levels. The volunteers demonstrated independence from insulin shots for several months when treated by the technique, according to project leader Robert Elliott, cofounder and medical director of Living Cell Technologies. Preliminary tests were also done on primates, who suffered no side effects from the treatment.

"In the preliminary tests we showed that there is a clear benefit and a vanishingly small risk," Elliot says. "So we have demonstrated what we need to go ahead with this large clinical trial." The preliminary results were reported at the annual meeting of the International Society for Cell Therapy in May this year.

The radical technique will now be tested on 18 volunteers in a larger clinical study that will take place in Russia and New Zealand, because a moratorium on xenotransplantation exists in Australia--although that is up for review later this year.

Volunteers in New Zealand began receiving the encapsulated porcine cells in their abdomens this week in a "simple procedure" done under local anesthetic, Elliot says. All the volunteers have type 1 diabetes.

The Australian researchers are deliberately including in the trial some patients with unstable diabetes, whose condition is poorly controlled by insulin treatment. After an initial two-month evaluation period, the volunteers will continue to be monitored for months or years. If the transplants are successful, the researchers hope to be able to wean the subjects off insulin injections.

Comments

  • Comment on Pig Cells
    I am praying that this will work for the long term as the diabetics desperately need this help. I can just imagine the joy they will feel when they find out they no longer need the insulin. The volunteers in the trial already showed they didn't need insulin for several months so the hope is great that this will come to being.

    Evelyn Guzman
    http://www.free-symptoms-of-diabetes-alert.com (If you want to visit, just click but if it doesn’t work, copy and paste it onto your browser.)
    Rate this comment: 12345

    randeg
    07/28/2009
    Posts:1
    • Re: Comment on Pig Cells
      With this flu, I find that hard to believe. I think I'll stick to diet and exercise. I have read on http://www.projectweightloss.com some diets and exercises for diabetics. Diet combined with physical exercise brings results almost twice as good as medication for diabetics. Practice and a healthy diet may help control Type II diabetes by reducing the amount of medication, and may help prevent those who do not have it, from getting it.
      Rate this comment: 12345

      Alecu
      08/06/2009
      Posts:7
      Avg Rating:
      2/5

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