Executive Summary of IPITA-TTS Opinion Leaders Report on the Future of β-Cell Replacement

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • James F. Markmann - , Massachusetts General Hospital (Author)
  • Stephen T. Bartlett - , University of Maryland, Baltimore (Author)
  • Paul Johnson - , University of Oxford (Author)
  • Olle Korsgren - , Uppsala University (Author)
  • Bernhard J. Hering - , University of Minnesota System (Author)
  • David Scharp - , Prodo Laboratories, LLC (Author)
  • Thomas W.H. Kay - , St Vincent's Institute of Medical Research, University of Melbourne (Author)
  • Jonathan Bromberg - , University of Maryland, Baltimore (Author)
  • Jon S. Odorico - , University of Wisconsin-Madison (Author)
  • Gordon C. Weir - , Harvard University (Author)
  • Nancy Bridges - , National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) (Author)
  • Raja Kandaswamy - , University of Minnesota System (Author)
  • Peter Stock - , University of San Francisco (Author)
  • Peter Friend - , University of Oxford (Author)
  • Mitsukazu Gotoh - , Fukushima Medical University (Author)
  • David K.C. Cooper - , University of Pittsburgh (Author)
  • Chung Gyu Park - , Seoul National University (Author)
  • Philip J. O'Connell - , University of Sydney (Author)
  • Cherie Stabler - , University of Florida (Author)
  • Shinichi Matsumoto - , Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co Ltd., National Center for Global Health and Medicine (Author)
  • Barbara Ludwig - , Department of Internal Medicine III, Paul Langerhans Institute Dresden (PLID) of the Helmholtz Center Munich (Author)
  • Pratik Choudhary - , King's College London (KCL) (Author)
  • Boris Khovatchev - , University of Virginia (Author)
  • Michael R. Rickels - , University of Pennsylvania Health System (Author)
  • Megan Sykes - , Columbia University (Author)
  • Kathryn Wood - , University of Oxford (Author)
  • Kristy Kraemer - , National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) (Author)
  • Albert Hwa - , Breakthrough T1D (formerly known as Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation) (Author)
  • Edward Stanley - , Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Monash University (Author)
  • Camillo Ricordi - , University of Miami (Author)
  • Mark Zimmerman - , Johnson & Johnson (Author)
  • Julia Greenstein - , Breakthrough T1D (formerly known as Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation) (Author)
  • Eduard Montanya - , University Hospital of Bellvitge (Author)
  • Timo Otonkoski - , University of Helsinki (Author)

Abstract

The International Pancreas and Islet Transplant Association (IPITA), in conjunction with the Transplantation Society (TTS), convened a workshop to consider the future of pancreas and islet transplantation in the context of potential competing technologies that are under development, including the artificial pancreas, transplantation tolerance, xenotransplantation, encapsulation, stem cell derived beta cells, beta cell proliferation, and endogenous regeneration. Separate workgroups for each topic and then the collective group reviewed the state of the art, hurdles to application, and proposed research agenda for each therapy that would allow widespread application. Herein we present the executive summary of this workshop that focuses on obstacles to application and the research agenda to overcome them; the full length article with detailed background for each topic is published as an online supplement to Transplantation.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)e25-e31
JournalTransplantation
Volume100
Issue number7
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2016
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

Scopus 84976324410

Keywords

Sustainable Development Goals

Keywords

  • Animals, Cell Proliferation, Congresses as Topic, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1/therapy, Humans, Immune Tolerance, Insulin/administration & dosage, Insulin-Secreting Cells/cytology, Islets of Langerhans/metabolism, Islets of Langerhans Transplantation/methods, Pancreas/metabolism, Pancreas Transplantation/methods, Regeneration, Societies, Medical, Swine, Transplantation, Heterologous/methods, Transplantation, Homologous, United States