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Originally published Thursday, September 28, 2006 at 12:00 AM

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Mixed results for trial diabetes treatment

A few diabetics have been able to give up their daily insulin shots after getting transplants of pancreas cells, according to the broadest...

The Associated Press

A few diabetics have been able to give up their daily insulin shots after getting transplants of pancreas cells, according to the broadest study of this experimental treatment. But for most patients, the results fell short of the cure researchers have been seeking.

Nearly half of the 36 patients who received the cell transplant achieved insulin independence by one year after the treatment. The benefits were mixed for the others, and about three-quarters of the whole group relapsed and needed insulin injections again.

The patients had severe cases of Type 1 diabetes, the less common form once known as juvenile diabetes, which is not obesity-linked.

Experts said the treatment, involving pancreas cells from donated cadavers, holds promise and they believe it won't be long before doctors figure out how to extend the benefit to more diabetics. Researchers, reporting their findings in today's New England Journal of Medicine, said they did not know why it worked in some people and not others.

"For a select few, this represents a major alternative in their quality of life," said Dr. Robert Goldstein, chief scientific officer for the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation International.

The only way for diabetics to receive a pancreas-cell transplant is to enroll in an experiment. The treatment is not yet available at U.S. hospitals.

About 5 percent to 10 percent of the world's 170 million diabetics have Type 1 diabetes, which occurs when the pancreatic cells that make insulin are destroyed. Type 2 is obesity-linked and occurs when the body can't use the insulin it makes.

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