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Cold Blooded
04-11-2007, 09:55 AM
Source: Times Online UK

Diabetics cured by stem-cell treatment (http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/health/article1637528.ece)


Diabetics using stem-cell therapy have been able to stop taking insulin injections for the first time, after their bodies started to produce the hormone naturally again.

In a breakthrough trial, 15 young patients with newly diagnosed type 1 diabetes were given drugs to suppress their immune systems followed by transfusions of stem cells drawn from their own blood.

The results show that insulin-dependent diabetics can be freed from reliance on needles by an injection of their own stem cells. The therapy could signal a revolution in the treatment of the condition, which affects more than 300,000 Britons.

People with type 1 diabetes have to give themselves regular injections to control blood-sugar levels, as their ability to create the hormone naturally is destroyed by an immune disorder.

All but two of the volunteers in the trial, details of which are published today in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), do not need daily insulin injections up to three years after stopping their treatment regimes.

The findings were released to reporters yesterday as the future of US stem-cell research was being debated in Washington.

Stem cells are immature, unprogrammed cells that have the ability to grow into different kinds of tissue and can be sourced from people of all ages.

Previous studies have suggested that stem-cell therapies offer huge potential to treat a variety of diseases such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and motor neuron disease. A study by British scientists in November also reported that stem-cell injections could repair organ damage in heart attack victims.

But research using the most versatile kind of stem cells — those acquired from human embryos — is currently opposed by powerful critics, including President Bush.

The JAMA study provides the first clinical evidence for the efficacy of stem cells in type 1 diabetes. Sufferers of the chronic condition, which normally emerges in childhood or early adulthood, have to inject themselves at least four times a day.

Type 2 diabetes, which tends to affect people later in life, is linked to lifestyle factors such as obesity. There are almost two million type 2 diabetics in Briton, most of whom control their blood-sugar levels with pills or through diet.

The new study, by a joint team of Brazilian and American scientists, found that one of the first patients to undergo the procedure has not used any supplemental synthetic

insulin for three years. “Very encouraging results were obtained in a small number of patients with early-onset disease,” the authors, led by Julio Voltarelli, from the University of São Paulo in Ribeirão Preto, Brazil. write. “Ninety-three per cent of patients achieved different periods of insulin independence and treatment-related toxicity was low, with no mortality.”

Type 1 diabetes occurs when the body’s own immune system malfunctions and destroys the insulin-producing beta cells of the pancreas, causing a shortage in the hormone.

By the time most patients receive a clinical diagnosis, 60 to 80 per cent of their beta cells have been wiped out. The disease progresses from this point very quickly, and can result in serious long-term complications including blindness, kidney failure, heart disease and stroke.

Dr Voltarelli’s team hoped that if they intervened early enough they could wipe out and then rebuild the body’s immune system by using stem cells, preverving a reservoir of beta cells and allowing them to to regenerate.

They enrolled Brazilian diabetics aged between 14 and 31 who had been diagnosed within the previous six weeks. After stem cells had been harvested from their blood, they then underwent a mild form of chemotherapy to eliminate the white blood cells causing damage to the pancreas. They were then given transfusions of their own stem cells to help rebuild their immune systems.

Richard Burt, a co-author of the study from Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, said that 14 of the 15 patients were insulin-free for some time following the treatment. Eleven of those were able to dispense with supplemental insulin immediately following the infusion of stem cells and have not had recourse to synthetic insulin since then, he said.

“Two other patients needed some supplemental insulin for 12 and 20 months after the procedure, but eventually both were able to wean themselves from taking daily shots,” he added. One patient went 12 months without shots, but relapsed a year after treatment after suffering a viral infection, and resumed daily insulin injections. Another volunteer was eliminated from the study because of complications. The therapy, known as autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, has already shown benefits to individuals with a range of auto-immune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn’s disease and lupus.

There are still question marks about exactly how the treatment works, and further studies will be required to fully evaluate it’s safety and efficacy.

“As a research scientist I am always hesitant to speak of a cure, but the initial results have been good and show the importance of conducting more trials,” Dr Burt said.

Given the right funding opportunities, university hospitals in London could be conducting research into the therapy within the next 12 months, he added.

“It will probably be five to eight years before we see a treatment being widely available,” he said.

In an accompanying editorial in JAMA, Dr Jay Skyler, of the Diabetes Research Institute at the University of Miami, wrote: “Research in this field is likely to explode in the next few years and should include randomised controlled trials, as well as mechanistic studies."

Athryn
04-11-2007, 10:14 AM
Awesome.

Hawkeye Fierce
04-11-2007, 10:25 AM
Really great news. I dated a Type 1 diabetic in high school for a while - she'd been diagnosed shortly before we started dating and was very optimistic that future medical advances would bring something like this.

Quaro
04-11-2007, 10:43 AM
Unfortunately, it looks like it will only help recently diagnosed Type 1s. Once the cells are destroyed by the immune system, this process won't bring them back.

dannimal
04-11-2007, 01:39 PM
Unfortunately, it looks like it will only help recently diagnosed Type 1s. Once the cells are destroyed by the immune system, this process won't bring them back.

Would the possibly specious value providing "blood banking" from newborn umbilical cords be a viable source of stem cells going forward, in terms of not discovering the diabetes before the immune system kills the stem cells?

SlyFrog
04-11-2007, 01:54 PM
Didn't we recently learn that diabetes was cured through hot pepper injections or something?

I am actually getting a bit sick of that aspect of the modern media: some "extremely promising" breakthrough that you never hear about again.

dannimal
04-11-2007, 02:00 PM
I was wondering when I said "Didn't we have this thread a few months ago?" if it was a different type of diabetes that the pepper thing was for.

Lunch of Kong
04-11-2007, 08:12 PM
Although this does very little for adults who are currently living with diabetes, it does underscore the importance of getting your body regularly checked out by doctors.

Houngan
04-11-2007, 08:39 PM
I recall it well, it was Type 1, and they said that while it didn't fully cure, it cured it for years after a treatment.

As I recall, the capsicum was used to kill off or deaden some nerves that were causing/prohibiting the insulin production, and they later refined it with a more appropriate drug for the task. I believe they were jabbing it into rat kidneys, and the cure was immediate and dramatic.

Either way, it's starting to look like Type 1 is on the way out, and that's a pretty damn fine thing.

H.

VegasRobb
04-12-2007, 02:55 AM
Excellent news.

Miramon
04-12-2007, 07:16 AM
I was wondering about that nerve-deadening thing too.

I think I saw a Wired news-blog article yesterday that cited over 3,000 deaths associated with adult stem cell therapy, but it seems to have vanished off their site, so perhaps it was incorrect and edited into nonexistence.

DrDel
04-12-2007, 11:47 AM
that is f'n sweet -- although it sounds like more of an alternative treatment at this stage rather than a cure.

unfortunately it looks like it won't do squat for Type II diabetics -- which make up the large majority of diabetics