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Microencapsulated adult porcine islets transplanted intraperitoneally in streptozotocin-diabetic non-human primates.

Susan A SafleyNorma S KenyonDora M BermanGraham F BarberMelissa WillmanStephanie DuncansonNeal IwakoshiRobert W HoldcraftLawrence GazdaPeter ThompsonI Raul BadellAthanassios SambanisCamillo RicordiCollin J Weber
Published in: Xenotransplantation (2018)
With donor xenoislet microencapsulation and host immunosuppression, APIs corrected hyperglycemia after ip transplantation in STZ-diabetic NHPs in the short term. The islet xenografts lost efficacy gradually, but at graft failure, some viable islets remained, substantial porcine C-peptide was detected in the peritoneal graft site, and there was very little evidence of a host immune response. We postulate that chronic effects of non-immunologic factors, such as in vivo hypoxic and hyperglycemic conditions, damaged the encapsulated islet xenografts. To achieve long-term function, new approaches must be developed to prevent this damage, for example, by increasing the oxygen supply to microencapsulated islets in the ip space.
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