Stem cell therapies for diabetes

IF 58.7 1区 医学 Q1 BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Juin Ting Chen, Nidheesh Dadheech, Eddie Han Pin Tan, Natasha Hui Jin Ng, Mickey Boon Chai Koh, James Shapiro, Adrian Kee Keong Teo
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Abstract

Diabetes has long-term, potentially severe implications for healthspan and lifespan and imposes an immense burden on global healthcare, the economy and society. Although a repertoire of medications is available to treat diabetes, these do not properly address the eventual lack of functional pancreatic beta cells that are needed to secrete insulin and maintain glucose homeostasis. Human islet cell transplantation from deceased donors is an established treatment for insulin-requiring type 1 diabetes, but demand outstrips supply. Substantial scientific and clinical progress has occurred in the last decade toward deriving pancreatic islet-like cells from human pluripotent stem cells, suggesting a potentially limitless solution to the supply issue and a new era in cell therapy for diabetes. Here, we critically review the scientific advances, the clinical trials and the various regulatory considerations that will need to be overcome for human stem cell-derived pancreatic islet-like cells to become the next cell therapy breakthrough for diabetes treatment.

干细胞治疗糖尿病
糖尿病对健康跨度和寿命具有长期、潜在的严重影响,并对全球医疗保健、经济和社会造成巨大负担。尽管目前已有一系列治疗糖尿病的药物,但这些药物并不能很好地解决最终缺乏分泌胰岛素和维持葡萄糖稳态所需的功能性胰腺细胞的问题。人体胰岛细胞移植是治疗需要胰岛素的1型糖尿病的常用方法,但供不应求。在过去的十年中,从人类多能干细胞中提取胰岛样细胞的研究取得了重大的科学和临床进展,这表明了供应问题的潜在无限解决方案和糖尿病细胞治疗的新时代。在这里,我们批判性地回顾了人类干细胞衍生的胰岛样细胞成为糖尿病治疗的下一个细胞治疗突破所需要克服的科学进展、临床试验和各种监管方面的考虑。
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来源期刊
Nature Medicine
Nature Medicine 医学-生化与分子生物学
CiteScore
100.90
自引率
0.70%
发文量
525
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Nature Medicine is a monthly journal publishing original peer-reviewed research in all areas of medicine. The publication focuses on originality, timeliness, interdisciplinary interest, and the impact on improving human health. In addition to research articles, Nature Medicine also publishes commissioned content such as News, Reviews, and Perspectives. This content aims to provide context for the latest advances in translational and clinical research, reaching a wide audience of M.D. and Ph.D. readers. All editorial decisions for the journal are made by a team of full-time professional editors. Nature Medicine consider all types of clinical research, including: -Case-reports and small case series -Clinical trials, whether phase 1, 2, 3 or 4 -Observational studies -Meta-analyses -Biomarker studies -Public and global health studies Nature Medicine is also committed to facilitating communication between translational and clinical researchers. As such, we consider “hybrid” studies with preclinical and translational findings reported alongside data from clinical studies.
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