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cydnimom
04-07-2006, 01:21 PM
What I like about this research on a cure is that they are looking at those who have Diabetes for at least 5 years - so basically your beta cells have stopped working. This is not so much for newly diagnosed patients where you are in a time limit to actually start taking any immunosuppressive drugs. I truly hope this one pans out and that the side effects are not as bad as the immunosuppresive drugs other researchers have been looking at.


http://www.chp.edu/pressroom/newsrelease264.php

Groundbreaking Human Clinical Trial for Type 1 Diabetes to Start This Spring in Pittsburgh

Researchers reverse juvenile diabetes in animal model; Phase 1 clinical trial approved by FDA

PITTSBURGH – March 27, 2006 – Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh of University of Pittsburgh Medical Center researchers Massimo Trucco, MD, and Nick Giannoukakis, PhD, observed marked amelioration of diabetes in a mouse model by a novel treatment strategy involving specific modification of the animal’s own dendritic cells, thereby reversing diabetes in animal studies.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the start of a clinical trial to evaluate the safety and feasibility of the treatment (Phase 1 trial). The trial is expected to begin sometime this spring and will include at least 15 patients over the age of 18, with type 1 diabetes.

Dr. Trucco, director of the Division of Immunogenetics at Children’s, and his research team will collaborate with Theresa Whiteside, PhD, scientific director at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute.

Dr. Trucco and his team found that by removing dendritic cells from the blood during a two- to four-hour procedure, some 20 million dendritic cells can be harvested.

Dendritic cells are cells found in the bloodstream and normally function as one of nature’s most efficient immune function cells. The cells identify foreign substances such as cancer cells, process these foreign substances, and then jumpstart the immune response by bringing these foreign substances to the attention of T cells.

Once harvested, researchers then combine the dendritic cells with specific blockers of molecules, known as CD40, CD80 and CD86, all of which can be synthesized in a laboratory. This treatment strategy was found to inhibit the interaction and destructive effect of T cells on the insulin-producing beta cells of the pancreas, a process that is known to be a critical part of how diabetes occurs.

Subcutaneous injection of dendritic cells into the abdominal/pelvic area near the pancreas and lymph nodes, blocks the T cells as they travel to the pancreas to destroy beta cells.

“We did this in mice, giving them six injections over the course of several weeks. The injections interrupted the T cell and beta cell interaction, allowing the beta cells in the pancreas to regenerate. This enabled the pancreas of the mice to begin producing insulin again,” said Dr. Trucco, who also is the Hillman Professor of Pediatric Immunology at Children’s Hospital and a professor of Pediatrics at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. “The injections proved capable of stopping this vicious cycle, and through this process curing type 1 diabetes in a mouse.”

Until now, scientists weren’t sure why the immune system attacks the beta cells, but the result is that the body stops producing insulin. When that happens, glucose builds up in the blood, but the body’s cells starve to death.

“We are very excited to begin the clinical trials and see if this process will work in patients with type 1 diabetes,” said Dr. Trucco. “A type 1 diabetes diagnosis can be devastating for children and their families. We hope this trial will have results that are life-altering for patients who suffer from this disease.”

In addition, Dr. Trucco and his team want to combine the dendritic cells with small portions (i.e. peptides) of insulin. Dr. Trucco believes that adding small doses of insulin to the dendritic cells will help guide the dendritic cells directly to the T cells. Adding the insulin ensures the dendritic cells are used specifically to block the T cell destruction of the beta cells, and not otherwise interrupt a person’s immunity. In other words, the dendritic cells are led directly to the target, the T cells that are causing the malfunction of the pancreas, and not to another part of the body.

Type 1 diabetes also is known as insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) or juvenile-onset diabetes. While type 2 diabetes typically strikes adults, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) reports that more than 1 million children and teenagers (age 19 and younger) have type 1 diabetes. According to the NIH, 5 percent to 10 percent of diagnosed diabetes cases in the United States are type 1 diabetes.

Type 1 diabetes is regarded as an autoimmune disease because a person’s immune system attacks and destroys the beta cells in the pancreas that produce insulin. Symptoms of type 1 diabetes usually develop over a short period of time and include increased thirst, frequent urination, constant hunger, weight loss, blurred vision and extreme fatigue. People with type 1 diabetes require numerous daily injections of insulin to survive.

About Dr. Trucco
Massimo Trucco, MD, has dedicated his life’s work to finding a cure for diabetes — finding a cure is a personal quest for him. As an international leader in the field of immunogenetics, Dr. Trucco has pioneered numerous important studies and also maintains a federally funded national bone marrow HLA typing center within his lab.

With this funding, Dr. Trucco and his team are able to continue their landmark research into improving the prediction of type 1 diabetes and understanding and managing its complications. Building on his discovery in 1994 that type 1 diabetes susceptibility may be genetic in nature and triggered by viruses, Dr. Trucco’s discoveries have continued to lead to better processes for molecular typing for matching bone marrow donors and recipients, the ability to identify those at risk for diabetes, an understanding of the link between a common virus and type 1 diabetes, and a potential cure for the pancreatic damage that causes insulin dependence.

akrickard
04-14-2006, 12:29 PM
That's fantastic!

My_Dana
04-26-2006, 12:45 PM
Hi Cyndi,

This is truly remarkable research.
Our little Dana (6yr old, dx'd 4-20-2006) was just at Children's Hospital this past weekend after being dx'd.

Dr. Trucco and the research is being done here in Pittsburgh.
I emailed Dr. Trucco in hopes of a reply, but assumed he probably wouldn't.
Much to my surprise - he did!

His emailed brought us to tears, and will be framed in Dana's room...

This is our hope...

Everyone, please prayer for Dr. Trucco and his team for success.

Dana's Dad, Ed

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dear Ed,

You have a beautiful young lady in your family!! Thank you for sharing with me her picture.

I am very sorry to hear what happened "last Thursday" to you guys.

However, if the news are not too good, you can be reassured that today, type 1 diabetes is a disease you can deal with properly. What I mean with it is by no means to try to reduce the seriousness of the disease, rather tell you that Dana will be able to conduct an absolutely normal life with all the satisfactions physical and intellectual she deserves. I have, working in my lab, two doctors who are diabetic and live a very exciting life. One is -- in his spare time -- an athlete practicing tennis at agonistic level. The other is traveling up and down from here to Italy where her family resides.

Your daughter has only to take care of her glycemia until people like me finally find a better and definitive solution for her problem. We have scientific evidence that this cure will soon be available. I want, however, to be categorically sure -- especially dealing with children

-- that no harm at all will be caused by our intervention before moving to treat young patients. This is also the opinion of the FDA that suggested to us first to prove the safety of our proposed intervention (phase I) and then eventually pass to the phase II for which we will start enroll patients.

Please give me some more time and I will be able to tell you some more detailed information.

I promise to keep you posted on our progress.

Your patience and your prayers are what I need the most at the moment.

Please give a kiss to Dana for me, telling her that we are doing our best to reduce the time in which she has to inject insulin in her young body.

Sincerely,

massimo


Massimo Trucco M.D.
Hillman Professor of Pediatric Immunology Head, Division of Immunogenetics Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh Rangos Research Center, 3460 5th Ave Pittsburgh, Pa. 15213-3205
(412) 692 6570 Phone
(412) 692 5809 Fax
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cydnimom
04-26-2006, 01:54 PM
Ed,

Thank you so much for sharing that! It just goes to show that this doctor is out there trying to make a difference and is not too busy to talk to everyday people that are affected by diabetes. From all the research I've been following his is one that looks promising to me. I'm very hopeful that he can find a cure without having to use too many other drugs that cause so many side effects and illnesses of their own.

When I was first diagnosed there was no cure in sight - and when I went to my new endo 8 yrs after diagnosis he said 5 yrs. That was 14 yrs ago! I am very hopeful now that 5 yrs is all that my son will have to wait along with your daughter and everyone else's children.

P.S. I am so sorry to hear about your daughter and I wish you all the best and peace in your heart as you are learning to care for her.

pookas
04-26-2006, 02:23 PM
That is very exciting. We also live in PA, but the other side. Northeast. I'll have to keep up on that one!

Linda-[NEPA]-Mom to:
Hunter, 5 yrs, dx'd 11/14/05 type I
Colby, 7 yrs, migraines

My_Dana
04-26-2006, 02:55 PM
Cyndi,

You are an inspiration to us that you can gone on to live a healthy happy life.
I will keep this forum updated on anything Dr. Trucco sends me. So stay tuned.

You have struggled long enough...

All the best and God Bless.

Dana's Dad, Ed
(Dana dx'd 4-20-2006 T1)

jvoyles
04-26-2006, 04:00 PM
Very interesting and I hope it will work. It does sound as though the injections would have to continue periodically, as the body continues to make it's own dendritic cells that cause the immune response that killed the beta cells in the first place. Still, a once a week shot of her own treated cells beats diabetes and all that goes with it.

I'm pretty cautious, though, when it comes to believing a cure is imminent. There was an article out regarding this same researcher about 3-4 years ago where he was giving a little girl hope of a cure by the time she went to prom so that she wouldn't have to wear her pump with her prom dress. The girl was about the same age as my daughter at that time, about 8, so he was saying it would be by the time she was 18. At the time, though, he was working with pig cells. Something completely different than this research.

He did take the time to answer an e-mail from me back then, too, and was just as sweet. I felt like sending him a pizza delivery so that they would work through lunch and get it done even 1 day sooner.

I do very much wish him luck. His current research certainly sounds promising and I know that he is going in to work every day trying to find a cure for us. I really appreciate that.

Jana

My_Dana
04-26-2006, 05:32 PM
Jana,

I also recently heard about Dr. Trucco's promise to take a girl to her prom.
He has been at for years.

Remember - it only takes that one breakthrough...and that can happen overnight. This may be that breakthrough.
And don't under the power of prayer.

Regardless. His email will be framed in Dana's room.

Dana's dad, Ed