Cure for Diabetes Approaches Reality
By Teresa Shipley | Wed Jun 30, 2010 12:32 PM ET 
 

In the medical world, pigs have provided a host of opportunities for humans, 
from heart transplant material to cancer therapies.
Now pigs have come to the rescue once again -- this time for diabetes.
Researchers from Washington University in St. Louis say they've managed to 
eliminate the disease in rats using transplanted pig cells -- and here's the 
kicker -- without the need for anti-rejection drugs.
The results appear in the American Journal of Pathology.
In a sort of one-two punch, researchers injected embryonic pancreatic pig cells 
into rats. The cells grow to become the pancreas, the organ responsible for 
producing insulin and regulating blood sugar. Several weeks later, the 
scientists injected a second dose of cells, this time from adult pigs.
The rats' bodies accepted the transplant and began producing enough insulin to 
regulate their systems, all without the need for anti-rejection drugs.
"While human islet transplants have cured diabetes in some people, there are so 
few donors that only a small percentage of patients get transplants," senior 
author Marc Hammerman MD, the Chromalloy Professor of Renal Diseases in 
Medicine, told ScienceDaily.
"Moreover, those who receive human islet transplants must take anti-rejection 
drugs for the rest of their lives, so essentially they are trading daily 
insulin shots for immune-suppression drugs, which carry their own risks. Our 
research paves the way for a new approach to treating diabetes, one that 
features a virtually unlimited supply of islets and no need for immune 
suppression," he said.
Hammerman and his colleagues are now beginning experimentation using the same 
methods on non-human primates. If that works, he says he hopes to introduce the 
therapy to humans.
 
http://news.discovery.com/human/cure-for-diabetes-approaches-reality.html?print=true

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