Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011854 (type 1 diabetes)
20,749 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

New immunosuppressants are said to be superior to cyclosporine due to their higher incidence of steroid sparing and to the reduced incidence of side-effects. From May 1992 to February 1995, 79 adults underwent primary liver transplantation using cyclosporine A (Sandimmun)-based triple drug immunosuppression. Nine patients who died early after liver transplantation due to reasons unrelated to immunological problems were excluded from this analysis. The long-term outcome of the remaining 70 patients was prospectively studied in relation to steroid and azathioprine withdrawal. They were re-evaluated 6-monthly in relation to liver and kidney function; cholesterolemia, infection, de novo diabetes mellitus and arterial hypertension, malignancy, ophthalmological and osteomuscular diseases. In case of rejection occurring during or after steroid tapering, patients were switched, by protocol, to tacrolimus therapy. Median follow-up was 81 months (range 60-96). Forty-four patients (62.8 %) were biopsied 5 years after transplant; 20 patients (28.6 %) were biopsied at a median follow-up of 32 months (range 7.8-47). Six patients (8.6 %) who refused biopsies more than 1 year after liver transplantation had normal liver values throughout the whole follow-up period. Five-year actual patient and graft survivals were 75 % and 65.8 %, respectively, for the whole group (n = 79) and 85.7 % and 74.3 % for the studied group (n = 70). Steroids could be withdrawn in all but two patients (97.1 %) at a median time of 7 months (range 3-42). Steroids were restarted in six patients (8.6 %) for extrahepatic reasons. Freedom from steroids was thus observed in 62 patients (88.6 %). Seven patients (10 %) had rejection after steroid tapering; six were switched to tacrolimus. Two patients (2.9 %) needed retransplantation because of acute and chronic rejection whilst still being on full immunosuppression. In total, three patients (4.3 %) had histological signs of chronic rejection during follow-up. At 5 years post-transplant, 66.6 % and 13.3 % of the 60 patients at risk were on cyclosporine and tacrolimus monotherapy, respectively; 93.3 % were steroid-free. Mean creatinine and cholesterol levels were 1.56 +/- 1.3 mg/dl and 193.5 +/- 56.6 mg/dl; incidences of de novo arterial hypertension, insulin dependent diabetes mellitus were 26.6 % and 13.3 %. Two patients (2.8 %) developed post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease, two (2.8 %) had skin cancer. Cyclosporine-based immunosuppression allows safe steroid withdrawal in most patients and cyclosporine monotherapy can be achieved in two-thirds without compromising graft and patient survival. Results of new immunosuppressive strategies should be approached with caution, especially when considering steroid sparing and the incidence of side-effects.
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PMID:Adult liver transplantation and steroid-azathioprine withdrawal in cyclosporine (Sandimmun)-based immunosuppression - 5 year results of a prospective study. 1179 40

Reported literature data strongly suggest that steroid metabolism is dysregulated in Type 1 diabetes mellitus. The aim of this study was to non-invasively examine the cortisol metabolism in children with Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) in detail and to test the hypothesis that adrenarche is affected under conventional intensive insulin therapy. In 24-h urine samples of 109 patients aged 4-18 years with T1DM of more than 1 year, steroids were profiled using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Additionally, urinary free cortisol (UFF) and cortisone (UFE) were quantified by RIA after extraction and chromatographic purification. Data on urinary steroids from 400 healthy controls served as reference values. Enzyme activities were assessed by established steroid metabolite ratios, e.g. 5alpha-reductase and 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase Type 2 (11beta-HSD2) by 5alpha-tetrahydrocortisol/tetrahydrocortisol and UFE/UFF, respectively. Urinary markers of adrenarche, especially dehydroepiandrosterone and its direct metabolites were elevated in patients, as were urinary 6beta-hydroxycortisol, UFE, and 11beta-HSD2 activity. However, overall cortisol secretion, as reflected by the sum of major urinary cortisol metabolites, was mostly normal and activity of 5alpha-reductase clearly reduced. Our study provides evidence for an exaggerated adrenarche in T1DM children, which may help to understand reported sequelae in female patients like hyperandrogenic symptoms. The findings also suggest a reduced cortisol inactivation via 5alpha-reductase that is not compensated by a fall in cortisol secretion. Whether the elevated urinary 6beta-hydroxycortisol and cortisone excretion, observed in the patients, are also present in other forms of hypercortisolism and may thus serve as non-invasive clinical stress markers deserves further study.
Steroids 2006 Jul
PMID:Exaggerated adrenarche and altered cortisol metabolism in Type 1 diabetic children. 1661 86

Immunosuppression with rapid discontinuation of corticosteroids, usually with induction therapy, is safe in kidney transplant recipients. In 89 patients, we induced immunosuppression with basiliximab or rabbit antithymocyte globulin (17 and 72 patients, respectively). Selection criteria for basiliximab were age (>or=65 years), history (malignancy; chronic infection), and type 1 diabetes mellitus (eligible for pancreas transplant). Steroids were administered through posttransplantation day 4 (five doses); maintenance immunosuppression was with tacrolimus and mycophenolate mofetil. At last follow-up (average, 286 days), most patients were steroid-free (antithymocyte globulin, 90%; basiliximab, 88%). Protocol biopsies were performed at 1, 4, and 12 months posttransplantation. The overall risk of biopsy-proven acute rejection was 12%. At 6 months posttransplantation, acute rejection-free survival was 93% for antithymocyte globulin, 65% for basiliximab (P<.001). Median time to biopsy-proven acute rejection was 27 and 71 days, respectively. The low incidence of biopsy-proven acute rejection with steroid-avoidance immunosuppression may be further reduced with antithymocyte globulin.
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PMID:Acute rejection risk in kidney transplant recipients on steroid-avoidance immunosuppression receiving induction with either antithymocyte globulin or basiliximab. 1679 89

In this study, we report a living donor partial pancreas transplantation using intraportal donor-specific leukocyte transfusion (DSLT). The recipient was a 38-year-old woman who had type I diabetes mellitus for 17 years. Hypoglycemia occurred 2 or 3 times per week. Her hemoglobin A1c level was 9.0%, and she required 70 U of insulin almost every day. The donor was her 64-year-old father. The steroid-minimized immunosuppressive protocol included 1.5mg of thymoglobulin administered with a steroid bolus on days 0, 4, and 7 postoperatively. Steroids were never prescribed thereafter. Postoperative maintenance therapy included tacrolimus (FK506) and mycophenolate mofetil. In addition to these conventional approarches, we administered intraportal DSLT on days 0, 1, 4, and 7 after transplantation. The donor-specific leukocytes (40mL) had been separated from donor whole blood using an apheresis filter (Cellsorba EX; Asahi Kasei medical Co, Ltd, Tokyo, Japan). In the recipient operation, a segmental pancreas graft was transplanted into the right iliac cavity with enteric drainage with a pancreatic duct stent. Operation time was 6 hours. The postoperative course was uneventful. The patient was discharged on day 15 after transplantation. There was no acute rejection for six months after transplantation. The hemoglobin A1c level recovered to 5.1% with 6 U of insulin per day. At immunologic analysis, only interleukine-10 cytokine production was elevated at 7 days after transplantation. At flow cytometry cross-match analysis, the immunoglobulin M antibody decreased from day 7 after transplantation. We conclude that intraportal DSLT may be an effective adjunct to a steroid-free regimen.
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PMID:Living related pancreas transplantation alone with enteric drainage in Japan: case report. 1892

Male sex is a risk factor for development and progression of diabetic nephropathy; however, the relationship between sex hormone levels and diabetic nephropathy in type 1 diabetic men is unknown. This was a prospective follow-up study as part of the nationwide Finnish Diabetic Nephropathy (FinnDiane) Study; 297 patients were followed for 5.9+/-1.5 years. Serum total testosterone (Tt) and estradiol (Te), calculated free testosterone (cFt) and estradiol (cFe) and sex hormone binding globulin were measured at baseline and correlated with urinary albumin excretion rate, estimated glomerular filtration rate and markers of metabolic syndrome. Diabetes without renal disease was associated with decreased Tt (p<0.001), Te (p<0.001) and cFt (p=0.001) levels compared with healthy non-diabetic men. With progression of renal disease from micro- to macroalbuminuria, this decrease in serum Tt was even more pronounced. Cox regression showed that cFt and cFe were independent predictors of the progression from macroalbuminuria to end-stage renal disease. Our study shows that men with type 1 diabetes exhibit dysregulated sex hormone levels, which is most pronounced in men with progressive renal disease, suggesting that sex hormones may play a role in the pathogenesis of diabetic nephropathy associated with type 1 diabetes.
Steroids 2010 Nov
PMID:Association between testosterone, estradiol and sex hormone binding globulin levels in men with type 1 diabetes with nephropathy. 2010 36