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Inhibition of insulin release in vitro mediated by mononuclear cells from diabetic patients treated with cyclosporin A or placebo.

  1. M Debray-Sachs,
  2. P Sai,
  3. G Feutren,
  4. F Lang,
  5. D Maugendre,
  6. C Boitard,
  7. J Hors and
  8. J F Bach
  1. Service d'Immunologie Clinique, Hôpital Necker, Paris, France.

    Abstract

    Anti-beta-cell-specific cell-mediated immunity was studied over a 12-mo period in 65 recently diagnosed diabetic patients randomly receiving either cyclosporin or placebo. Anti-beta-cell cellular immunity was assessed by an in vitro test based on the inhibition of insulin release from cultured rat islet cells by patients' mononuclear cells. This beta-cell-suppressive effect disappeared in cyclosporin A-treated patients within 1 mo and did not reappear during 12 mo of follow-up. Conversely, the suppressive effect persisted unchanged in placebo-treated patients during 12 mo of follow-up. These changes were predictive neither of cyclosporin A-induced remission nor of relapses. Results of the insulin-release inhibition test were not correlated to islet cell autoantibodies or HLA phenotype.

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