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ENROLLING BY INVITATION
NCT05287737

Clinical Outcome After Total Pancreatectomy With Islet Autotransplantation

Sponsor: Leiden University Medical Center

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

A total pancreatectomy with islet autotransplantation (TPIAT) can be performed for a number of benign indications, such as chronic pancreatitis. In the current standard of treatment, after non-invasive, endoscopic efforts and other surgical options to relieve the pain, a total pancreatectomy is a last resort option. The pancreas is surgically removed during this procedure. Afterwards, the patient will have diabetes mellitus that is usually difficult to control with dependency on exogenous insulin administration. In TPIAT, a total pancreatectomy is followed by islet isolation from the resected pancreas and autotransplantation of these islets into the liver by means of a transhepatic intraportal islet infusion. Depending on the number and quality of islets, TPIAT may lead to full islet function so that no anti-hyperglycemic therapy is necessary or to partial islet function necessitating anti-hyperglycemic therapy. This can be only oral agents with reasonable islet function or complex insulin regimes with poor islet function. However, even with partial Islet function, glycemic control is easier with a lower risk of hypoglycemic events and diabetes-related complications, and an overall improvement of quality of life. In this cohort, the endocrine function and glycemic variability will be monitored over time (up to 15 years). Additionally, pain scores, pain perception and central sensitization, quality of life, exocrine pancreatic insufficiency and diabetes-related stress will be monitored.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

16 Years - Any

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

100

Start Date

2022-06-21

Completion Date

2047-03

Last Updated

2024-06-06

Healthy Volunteers

No

Locations (1)

Leiden University Medical Center

Leiden, South Holland, Netherlands