Pancreatic Islet Transplantation Using the Nonhuman Primate (Rhesus) Model Predicts That the Portal Vein Is Superior to the Celiac Artery as the Islet Infusion Site

  1. Boaz Hirshberg1,
  2. Sean Montgomery1,
  3. Michael G. Wysoki2,
  4. He Xu1,
  5. Doug Tadaki1,
  6. Janet Lee3,
  7. Kenneth Hines3,
  8. Jason Gaglia1,
  9. Noelle Patterson1,
  10. John Leconte1,
  11. Douglas Hale1,
  12. Richard Chang4,
  13. Alan D. Kirk1 and
  14. David M. Harlan1
  1. 1National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases/Navy Transplantation & Autoimmunity Branch, Bethesda, Maryland
  2. 2Radiology Department, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut
  3. 3Department of Transfusion Medicine, Clinical Center, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland
  4. 4Radiology Department, Clinical Center, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland

    Abstract

    We’ve established a nonhuman primate islet allotransplant model to address questions such as whether transplanting islets into the gut’s arterial system would more safely and as effectively support long-term islet allograft survival compared with the traditional portal vein approach. We reasoned that islets make up <2% of pancreatic cell mass but consume an estimated 20% of arterial blood flow, suggesting an advantage for the arterial site. Access to the arterial system is also easier and safer than the portal system. Pancreatectomized rhesus macaques were transplanted with allogeneic islets infused into either the portal vein (n = 6) or the celiac artery (n = 4). To prevent rejection, primates were given daclizumab, tacrolimus, and rapamycin. In five of six portal vein experiments, animals achieved normoglycemia without exogenous insulin. In contrast, none of the animals given intra-arterial islets showed even transient insulin independence (P = 0.048). Two of the latter animals received a second islet transplant, this time to the portal system, and both achieved insulin independence. Thus, intraportal islet transplantation under conventional immunosuppression is feasible in primates and can result in long-term insulin independence when adequate immunosuppression is maintained. Arterial islet injection, however, does not appear to be a viable islet transplantation technique.

    Footnotes

    • Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Boaz Hirshberg, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases/Navy Transplantation & Autoimmunity Branch, 10 Center Dr., Bldg. 10, Rm. 11S219, Bethesda, MD 20889. E-mail: boazh{at}intra.niddk.nih.gov.

      Received for publication 13 September 2001 and accepted in revised form 3 April 2002.

      IEQ, islet equivalent; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; NIH, National Institutes of Health.

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