China Daily

Breakthrou­gh by Shanghai doctors uses stem cells to cure diabetes

- By ZHOU WENTING in Shanghai zhouwentin­g@chinadaily.com.cn

Doctors in Shanghai have, for the first time in the world, cured a patient’s diabetes through the transplant­ation of pancreatic cells derived from stem cells.

The 59-year-old man, who had Type 2 diabetes for 25 years, has been completely weaned off insulin for 33 months, Shanghai Changzheng Hospital announced on Tuesday.

A paper about the medical breakthrou­gh, achieved after more than a decade of endeavor by a team of doctors at the hospital, was published on the website of the journal Cell Discovery on April 30.

It is the first reported instance in the world of a case of diabetes with severely impaired pancreatic islet function being cured via stem cellderive­d autologous, regenerati­ve islet transplant­ation, the hospital said. The most common pancreatic islet cells produce insulin.

Diabetes poses a serious threat to human health. Medical experts said that poor blood sugar control over a long period can lead to severe complicati­ons, including blindness, kidney failure, cardiovasc­ular and cerebrovas­cular complicati­ons, and amputation. Life-threatenin­g situations may also occur due to hypoglycem­ic coma, and ketoacidos­is, which happens when the body begins breaking down fat too quickly.

China is the country with the largest diabetic patient population. There are 140 million diabetes patients in the country, of whom about 40 million depend on lifelong insulin injections, according to the Internatio­nal Diabetes Federation.

Experts said severe diabetes patients struggling with blood sugar control can only be effectivel­y treated by minimally invasive transplant­ation, which injects islet tissue extracted from the pancreas of a donor.

However, due to factors such as a severe shortage of donors and the complexity of the islet isolation technology, it is hard for such transplant­ation to meet current clinical needs. That made how to regenerate human pancreatic islet tissue on a large scale in vitro a worldwide academic focus, the team in Shanghai said.

Yin Hao, a leading researcher on the team and director of the hospital’s Organ Transplant Center, said they used the patient’s own peripheral blood mononuclea­r cells and reprogramm­ed them into autologous induced pluripoten­t stem cells. They used technology they devised to transform them into “seed cells” and reconstitu­ted pancreatic islet tissue in an artificial environmen­t.

“Our technology has matured and it has pushed boundaries in the field of regenerati­ve medicine for the treatment of diabetes,” said Yin, whose team conducted the research with scientists from the Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science at the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

He said the patient, who was at serious risk of diabetes complicati­ons, had a kidney transplant in June 2017 but had lost most pancreatic islet function and relied on multiple insulin injections every day.

The patient received the transplant­ation in July 2021. Eleven weeks after the surgery, he was weaned off external insulin, and the dose of oral drugs for sugar-level control was gradually reduced and completely withdrawn one year later. “Follow-up examinatio­ns showed that the patient’s pancreatic islet function was effectivel­y restored, and his renal function was within normal range,” Yin said. “Such results suggested that the treatment can avoid the progressio­n of diabetic complicati­ons.”

Our technology has matured and it has pushed boundaries in the field of regenerati­ve medicine for the treatment of diabetes.”

Yin Hao, director of Shanghai Changzheng Hospital’s Organ Transplant Center

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