J Korean Soc Transplant.  2007 Dec;21(2):196-202.

Clinical Islet Transplantation: Where Do We Stand on?

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Surgery, Samsung Medical Center, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea. kmhyj111@hotmail.com

Abstract

Islet transplantation had been suggested as a potential treatment modality for type I diabetes mellitus for the last two decades. The methods for the islet isolation and purification were developed. In 2000, the excellent clinical outcomes from the Edmonton group were reported. And various basic researches were performed for the elucidation of the mechanism of initial islet loss. Although the Edmonton protocol, which had initially raised hopes that all the technical and immunologic problems would be solved, recently revealed as a limited success within the selective cases and short-term follow-up, these inspirations led us to the subsequent clinical or basic research of islet transplantation. As a result, many clinical trials and studies have been attempted for the establishment of the optimal immune suppression regimen, the prevention from islet loss in the process of isolation, and the improvement of the intraportal engraftment. This article reviews the history and the recent progress and possible strategies for the clinical islet transplantation.

Keyword

Pancreas islet cell transplantation; Type I diabetes mellitus

MeSH Terms

Diabetes Mellitus
Hope
Islets of Langerhans Transplantation*
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