Diabetes Care, Vol 20, Issue 3 362-368, Copyright © 1997 by American Diabetes Association
Solitary pancreas transplantation. Experience with 62 consecutive cases
RJ Stratta, LG Weide, R Sindhi, D Sudan, JT Jerius, JL Larsen, K Cushing, MT Grune and SJ Radio
Department of Surgery, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, USA.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the safety and efficacy of solitary pancreas
transplantation in the treatment of IDDM. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: A
single-center retrospective case series of 62 consecutive solitary pancreas
transplants (20 sequential pancreas after kidney, 42 pancreas transplants
alone) performed in 57 adult IDDM patients was studied. Indications for
solitary pancreas transplantation were 1) the presence of two or more overt
diabetic complications and/or 2) glucose hyperlability with hypoglycemic
unawareness and impaired quality of life. The recipient group consisted of
31 men and 26 women with a mean age of 38 years (range 25-62) and a mean
duration of diabetes of 26 years (range 14-52). Mean pretransplant
glycohemoglobin level was 9.9 +/- 2.6%. Organ acceptance was restricted to
ideal donors and man-dated a minimum of a two-antigen match (mean human
leukocyte antigen ABDR match 2.7). The mean cold ischemia time was 16.6 h.
Whole-organ pancreas transplantation was performed with bladder drainage by
the duodenal segment technique. All patients were managed with either
triple or quadruple immunosuppression. Monitoring included prospective
urine cytology as well as cystoscopic transduodenal needle biopsies.
RESULTS: The mean length of initial hospital stay was 18 days, and mean
hospital charges were $106,341. The incidences of rejection, infection, and
surgical complications were 70, 55, and 47%, respectively. Overall patient
and graft survival rates were 86 and 52%, respectively, with a mean
follow-up of 28 months. All patients with functioning grafts had excellent
metabolic control (mean glycohemoglobin level 5.1%) and achieved good
rehabilitation. CONCLUSIONS: Despite morbidity, solitary pancreas
transplantation can be performed with improving success, can enhance
quality of life, and can offer an opportunity to arrest secondary diabetic
complications.