Total pancreatectomy with islet autotransplantation in diabetic and pre-diabetic patients with intractable chronic pancreatitis

Abstract Total pancreatectomy with islet autotransplantation (TPIAT) is an effective treatment option for non-diabetic patients with intractable chronic pancreatitis. The outcome and potential benefits for pre-diabetic and diabetic patients are less well established. Thirty-four patients underwent T...

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Published inJournal of pancreatology (Online) Vol. 3; no. 2; pp. 86 - 92
Main Authors Bachul, Piotr J., Grybowski, Damian J., Anteby, Roi, Basto, Lindsay, Perea, Laurencia, Golab, Karolina, Wang, Ling-Jia, Tibudan, Martin, Gutierrez, Angelica P., Komorniczak, Michal, Nagpal, Sajan, Lucander, Aaron, Fung, John, Matthews, Jeffrey B., Witkowski, Piotr
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Wolters Kluwer Health/LWW 01.06.2020
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Summary:Abstract Total pancreatectomy with islet autotransplantation (TPIAT) is an effective treatment option for non-diabetic patients with intractable chronic pancreatitis. The outcome and potential benefits for pre-diabetic and diabetic patients are less well established. Thirty-four patients underwent TPIAT were retrospectively divided into 3 groups according to pre-operative glycemic control: diabetes mellitus (DM) (n = 5, 15%), pre-DM (n = 11, 32%) and non-DM (n = 18, 54%). Pre-operative fasting c-peptide was detectable and similar in all 3 groups. Islet yield in the DM group was comparable to pre-DM and non-DM groups (median islet equivalents [IEQ] was 191,800, 111,800, and 232,000 IEQ, respectively). Patients received islet mass of over the target level of 2000 IEQ/kg in pre-DM and DM at lower but clinically meaningful rates compared to the non-DM group: 45% (5/11) and 60% (3/5) for a combined 50% (8/16) rate, respectively, compared to 83% (15/18) for the non-DM group. At 1 year, fasting c-peptide and HbA1c did not differ between DM and pre-DM groups but c-peptide was significantly higher in non-DM. Islet transplantation failed (negative c-peptide) only in 1 patient. Pre-operatively, all patients experienced pancreatic pain with daily opioid dependence in 60% to 70%. Pancreatic-type pain gradually subsided completely in all groups with no differences in other painful somatic symptoms. Diabetic patients with measurable pre-operative c-peptide can achieve similar benefit from TPIAT, with comparable outcomes to pre-diabetic and non-diabetic patients including pain relief and the metabolic benefit of transplanted islets. Not surprisingly, endocrine outcomes for diabetic and pre-diabetics patients are substantially worse than in those with normal pre-operative glucose control.
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PJB has contributed to research design, original draft of the manuscript, review and editing, JBM and PW contributed with original draft of the manuscript, review and editing, all authors participated equally in data analysis and data curation as well as format analysis and project administration. In addition, JF, JBM, and PW contributed in supervision of the project.
Author’s specific contributions
ISSN:2096-5664
2577-3577
DOI:10.1097/JP9.0000000000000048