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Medicine Science

A Stem-Cell Cure For Type 1 Diabetes? For One Man, It Seems To Have Worked (yahoo.com) 48

Long-time Slashdot reader fahrbot-bot shares the New York Times' report on a 64-year-old man who participated in a clinical trial by Vertex Pharmaceuticals involving an infusion of insulin-producing pancreas cells grown from stem cells.

"Now his body automatically controls its insulin and blood sugar levels." Mr. Shelton, now 64, may be the first person cured of the disease with a new treatment that has experts daring to hope that help may be coming for many of the 1.5 million Americans suffering from Type 1 diabetes. "It's a whole new life," Mr. Shelton said. "It's like a miracle." Diabetes experts were astonished but urged caution.

The study is continuing and will take five years, involving 17 people with severe cases of Type 1 diabetes. It is not intended as a treatment for the more common Type 2 diabetes.

"We've been looking for something like this to happen literally for decades," said Dr. Irl Hirsch, a diabetes expert at the University of Washington who was not involved in the research. He wants to see the result, not yet published in a peer-reviewed journal, replicated in many more people. He also wants to know if there will be unanticipated adverse effects and if the cells will last for a lifetime or if the treatment would have to be repeated. But, he said, "bottom line, it is an amazing result...."

For Mr. Shelton the moment of truth came a few days after the procedure, when he left the hospital. He measured his blood sugar. It was perfect. He and Ms. Shelton had a meal. His blood sugar remained in the normal range.

Mr. Shelton wept when he saw the measurement.

"The only thing I can say is 'thank you.'"

15 people in a lab spent over 20 years working on converting the stem cells, the article reports. The total cost: about $50 million.
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A Stem-Cell Cure For Type 1 Diabetes? For One Man, It Seems To Have Worked

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  • by rmdingler ( 1955220 ) on Sunday November 28, 2021 @09:46AM (#62027523) Journal

    There are already treatments for Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (60% efficacy) and a few other maladies on the market as a result of stem cell research. In addition to cancer and diabetes, clinical studies and trials are underway to battle heart disease.

    We are right on the verge of increasing both quality and longevity of life.

    • Wonder how I can get involved in one of those trials. No pancreas, and I'm long since tired of having to take insulin every meal.

      I'd be delighted to be part of a clinical trial for something like this....

      • Where are you located? Try to join the trials for Viacyte and Sernova. Also, why haven't you got the CGM artificial pancreas setup, that is: Tandem + Dexcom G6. You know about that right?

        • New Orleans area.

          And no, I don't know about the CGM artitifical pancreases (pancreasi?). Something to ask my doctor about next time I see one of them, aye....

          Are we talking augment to a not-quite-up-to-snuff pancreas, or "replacement part for a missing pancreas"?

          My thanks for the tip, though. I obviously need to pay more attention to medical news.... .

          • One is called the Control-IQ from Tandem and the other is the MiniMed 770G. They are more like an FDA approved replacement for a missing pancreas, mechanical though, not an actual biological pancreas. The way it works is that it automatically pumps insulin doses based on the readings of an FDA approved Continuous Glucose Monitoring device such as the Dexcom G6 or G7 and an Insulin pump. The current US FDA approved devices only pump insulin, not glucagon yet (which some people want.)

            Read these links: https:/ [uvahealth.com]

    • There are already treatments for Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (60% efficacy) and a few other maladies on the market as a result of stem cell research.

      And to think, some people still want this type of research to be completely illegal. Fools.

      • One of the multitude of justifications I've heard for refusing the Covid vaccine is because the vaccines are made by growing the viruses in fetal cells.

        In truth, only the J&J vaccine is prepared that way, and the fetal cells used are lab grown from two terminated pregnancies in the 1960's.

  • False (Score:5, Interesting)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Sunday November 28, 2021 @11:09AM (#62027627)

    First off it has been cured before using this method, 20 years ago. Reference: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.go... [nih.gov] at least one of the patients from that year 2000 study is currently still cured as of June 2021. In fact another lab reported a stem cell based cure before the lab in the article did. Reference: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.go... [nih.gov] But it is not a proper cure if you have to be on immunosuppressants. The better cure appears to be encapsulated beta cells which are currently in clinical trials from ViaCyte ( PEC-Encap ), Serbia, and others which also have shown signs of being a cure .. without immunosuppressants. In fact Meltons lab is now looking at encapsulated beta cells too. Best I can tell the article was poorly researched, maybe an ad for Vertex pharma? I dunno.

    • Oops, the company name Sernova got autocorrected to Serbia. Although, maybe the Serbians are looking at encapsulated beta cells too. Anyway, I wanted to give two company names so that I am not just an ad for one. There are other companies too btw, and institutions or universities.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Options for treating autoimmune diseases are much better than they were in 2001. While a magic bullet hasn't been found for Type 1, it may be reasonable to revisit approaches that didn't work twenty years ago because we can preserve the functional gains longer.

  • "15 people in a lab spent over 20 years working on converting the stem cells, the article reports. The total cost: about $50 million." Which when it hits the market will be the cost per-person for the treatment.
  • As far as I can tell, this is just one step closer to a cure that’s still quite far away.
    Doctors have been able to "cure" type 1 diabetes for decades. They do a pancreas transplant. However, because of the risk of rejection and the immunosuppressants you have to take, they only did it when doing another organ transplant at the same time (if you have to take immunosuppressants anyway...). There have also been several studies injecting just the islets that make insulin, which work quite well.
    This change

    • Noting: The article mentions that there also aren't enough pancreas donors available for the number of Type 1 people who could benefit from a transplant.

  • by bobjr94 ( 1120555 ) on Sunday November 28, 2021 @10:50PM (#62028803) Homepage
    When ever there is some breakthrough on cancer or diabetes it seems that company always gets bought up by a mega pharm company. Then a press release saying our big pharma company is excited to buy this new little company and we will continue it's exciting research in hopes of finding a cure. Then nothing is heard about it again. I think having a person require a lifetime supply of drugs and needing an entire industry dedicated into the treatment vs a cure then done has something to do with it.
  • T1 Diabetes Mellitus is a disease an autoimmune disease where if you have it, your immune system actively treats your insulin producing beta cells as a threat and kills them. If you replace those cells with more beta cells, your immune system will kill those too.

    In 1922, Dr Banting and his research assistant, Best extracted the essence of islets in the pancreas and dubbed it 'insulin', then successfully treated a 14yo girl with diabetes and turned a guaranteed (within months of onset) fatal disease into a

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