Posted on 08/10/2017 7:54:32 AM PDT by Red Badger
The damaged immune systems of diabetics can be retrained to stop them destroying insulin, scientists believe, following successful trials of a pioneering new therapy.
Researchers at Kings College London and Cardiff University showed that injecting patients with tiny protein fragments prevented immune cells from targeting vital insulin.
Type 1 diabetes develops when a patient's immune system mistakenly attacks the insulin producing beta cells in the pancreas.
Without treatment the number of beta cells will slowly decrease and the body will no longer be able to maintain normal blood sugar (blood glucose) levels, leading to patients needing daily injections.
But a trial
involving 27 people showed it was possible to halt the loss of beta cells with fortnightly or monthly injections for six months. There were also no toxic side-effects.
A placebo group who were not given the new treatment declined over the same period, while the trial patients all remained stable. The team is now planning larger trials.
Professor Mark Peakman, of Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust and King's College London, said: "When someone is diagnosed with type 1 diabetes they still typically have between 15 per cent and 20 per cent of their beta cells.
We wanted to see if we could protect these remaining cells by retraining the immune system to stop attacking them.
"We still have a long way to go, but these early results suggest we are heading in the right direction. The peptide technology used in our trial is not only appears to be safe for patients at this stage, but it also has a noticeable effect on the immune system."
(Excerpt) Read more at telegraph.co.uk ...
I have a friend with this disease. Hopefully there will be some marketable results from this soon.
My son has been Type 1 since age 4 (16 years). I have heard of many such “breakthroughs” over the years, but nothing seems to materialize. Diabetes is big business, so methinks that many of these advancements get bought up and suppressed. Yes, I am cynical.
Don't be too cynical.
Many are just too dangerous and some don’t pan out even though lab tests were promising.
I would have thought that stem-cell transplants would have cured it by now.................
New Stem Cell Treatment “Switches Off” Type 1 Diabetes:
http://www.iflscience.com/health-and-medicine/remarkable-new-method-switches-diabetes-may-lead-future-without-insulin/
Pancreatic Islet Transplantation:
https://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/diabetes/overview/insulin-medicines-treatments/pancreatic-islet-transplantation
Regrowth of Beta Cells with Small Molecule Therapy:
https://diabetesresearchconnection.org/cause-view/regrowth-of-beta-cells-with-small-molecule-therapy/?gclid=CKTfkOr9zNUCFUM6gQodMMUBSQ
bump for reference
This is HUGE. This fixes the problem with the last big breakthrough over 20 years ago. This one counts imo.
I was told 44 years ago when diagnosed (age 11) not to worry too much about it because there would be a cure within 5 yrs. Who wouldn’t be cynical by now? But this one is so huge. Can’t wait to see what the larger study produces.
To all Type 1 diabetics out there - GET A PUMP. It saved my life and will change yours.
Too much money being made. This therapy won’t see the light of day from the FDA.
“methinks that many of these advancements get bought up and suppressed.”
Same with cancer and many other diseases. There is no money in cures.
Type 2 diabetes affects more people than Type 1 does. Hopefully they will develop a vaccine for the former. It will positively impact society similar to that what the Salk vaccine did when it was first developed.
That’s the only way it’s getting done. This study was done in Britain. That’s the real thing to be cynical about: the US using the rest of the world as guinea pigs.
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