Immunotherapy drug delays onset of Type 1 diabetes in at-risk group
2021-03-03
(Press-News.org) More than five years after receiving an experimental immunotherapy drug, half of a group of people at high risk of developing Type 1 diabetes remained disease-free compared with 22% of those who received a placebo, according to a new trial overseen by Yale School of Medicine researchers.
And those who developed diabetes did so on average about five years after receiving the new drug, called teplizumab, compared with 27 months for those who received the placebo.
The study, which was done in collaboration with researchers from Indiana University, was published March 3 in the journal Science Translational Medicine.
"If approved for use, this will be the first drug to delay or prevent Type 1 diabetes," said Kevan Herold, the C.N.H. Long Professor of Immunobiology and of Medicine (Endocrinology) at Yale and co-senior author of the paper.
The drug, developed by biotechnology company Provention, has been awarded breakthrough status by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and could be approved for general use by summer, Herold said.
In the trial, an analysis of the 76 subjects showed reduced levels of damage caused by T cells in response to the drug and improved functioning of insulin-producing beta cells in those who received teplizumab.
The subjects in the trial had a median age of 13 years and relatives with Type 1 diabetes.
The new study is the result of 30 years of work by Herold's lab to find new treatments for Type 1 diabetes. The findings are a follow-up to another clinical study organized by TrialNet, an international coalition dedicated to the study of the disease. That study, which was published in 2019, showed a delay in the onset of Type 1 diabetes among those who received teplizumab.
Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease in which a person's own T cells attack insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreas. Those diagnosed require lifelong insulin treatment and face higher risk of death and diseases affecting the heart, kidneys, and vision. Diagnosis of the disease often occurs during childhood or adolescence.
Herold stressed it is not known whether some of the subjects who received teplizumab will never develop Type 1 diabetes. But delaying onset of disease could have a big impact on the development of those at high risk.
"Any time without diabetes is important, but particularly so for those children who might have a chance to grow up without it," he said.
INFORMATION:
The study was funded by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.
Emily Sims of the Indiana University School of Medicine is lead author of the study.
The sponsor of the trial was the Type 1 Diabetes TrialNet Study Group, a network funded by the National Institutes of Health and JRDF.
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2021-03-03
A series of nanoparticle-based vaccines elicits protective antibodies against various strains of the influenza virus in nonhuman primates, according to work from Nicole Darricarrère and colleagues. Although more research is needed, the vaccines mark an important step toward a universal flu vaccine for humans, which has long been a major goal for infectious disease researchers. Current seasonal flu vaccines can prevent disease but often only work for a year, after which a new vaccine must be developed. This occurs because influenza viruses evolve extremely quickly, meaning that a year-old vaccine may not prepare the immune system to recognize a new ...
2021-03-03
Endangered Southern Resident killer whales prey on a diversity of Chinook and other salmon. The stocks come from an enormous geographic range as far north as Alaska and as far south as California's Central Valley, a new analysis shows.
The diverse salmon stocks each have their own migration patterns and timing. They combine to provide the whales with a "portfolio" of prey that supports them across the entire year. The catch is that many of the salmon stocks are at risk themselves.
"If returns to the Fraser River are in trouble, and Columbia River returns are strong, then prey availability to the whales potentially balances out ...
2021-03-03
Scientists from the Skoltech Center for Design, Manufacturing and Materials (CDMM) and the Institute for Metals Superplasticity Problems (IMSP RAS) have studied the fatigue behavior of additive-manufactured high-entropy alloys (HEA). The research was published in the Journal of Alloys and Compounds.
Conventional 20th century materials that are extensively used in industries and mechanical engineering have reached their performance limit. Nowadays, alloying is commonly used to improve the alloys' mechanical performance and increase their operating temperature. ...
2021-03-03
Coastal communities at the forefront of climate change reveal valuable approaches to foster adaptability and resilience, according to a worldwide analysis of small-scale fisheries by Stanford University researchers.
Globally important for both livelihood and nourishment, small-scale fisheries employ about 90 percent of the world's fishers and provide half the fish for human consumption. Large-scale shocks -- like natural disasters, weather fluctuations, oil spills and market collapse -- can spell disaster, depending on the fisheries' ability to adapt to change. In an assessment of 22 small-scale fisheries that experienced stressors, researchers revealed that diversity and flexibility are among the most important adaptive capacity factors ...
2021-03-03
Humans were present in Florida by 14,000 years ago, and until recently, it was believed the Bahamas - located only a few miles away - were not colonized until about 1,000 years ago. But new findings from a team including a Texas A&M University at Galveston researcher prove that the area was colonized earlier, and the new settlers dramatically changed the landscape.
Peter van Hengstum, associate professor in the Department of Marine and Coastal Environment Science at Texas A&M-Galveston, and colleagues have had their findings published in PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences).
Researchers generated a new ...
2021-03-03
A detailed analysis of mental health treatment trends during the COVID-19 pandemic found a 7% increase in visits during the initial shelter-in-place period in 2020, compared with the same 3-month period in 2019.
The study, published in The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry March 3, examined patient visits for psychiatric diagnoses among members of Kaiser Permanente in Northern California.
The greatest increases in visits were for substance use (up 51%), adjustment disorder (up 15%), anxiety (up 12%), bipolar disorder (up 9%), and psychotic disorder (up 6%). Adjustment disorder is diagnosed when someone responds ...
2021-03-03
Breakthrough greatly enhances the ultrafast resolution achievable with X-ray free-electron lasers.
A large international team of scientists from various research organizations, including the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory, has developed a method that dramatically improves the already ultrafast time resolution achievable with X-ray free-electron lasers (XFELs). It could lead to breakthroughs on how to design new materials and more efficient chemical processes.
An XFEL device is a powerful combination of particle accelerator and laser technology producing extremely brilliant and ultrashort pulses of X-rays for scientific research. "With this technology, scientists can now track processes that occur within millions of a billionth of ...
2021-03-03
HOUSTON - (March 3, 2021) - In one of the first studies of its kind, an analysis of camera-trap data from 15 wildlife preserves in tropical rainforests has revealed a previously unknown relationship between the biodiversity of mammals and the forests in which they live.
Tropical rainforests are home to half of the world's species, but with species going extinct at a rapid pace worldwide, it's difficult for conservationists to keep close tabs on the overall health of ecosystems, even in places where wildlife is protected. Researchers found that observational data from camera traps can help.
"In general, rainforest ecosystems ...
2021-03-03
Under the 2015 Paris Agreement, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change agreed to pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 2.0°C and, ideally, to 1.5°C, over preindustrial levels. However, even before that treaty was signed, scientists had already warned that those "best case" targets were unlikely to be achievable. Consequently, many fire weather studies are built with models that simulate much higher levels of climate warming.
Recently, researchers from South Korea, Japan, and the United States have found that by projecting the fire weather conditions under two mildly varying warming levels -- one in which the global climate warms by 1.5°C and the other by 2°C -- even just a half-degree of warming could ...
2021-03-03
"What scientists have achieved in a year since the discovery of a brand-new virus is truly remarkable," says Emma Hodcroft from the Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine (ISPM) of the University of Bern, first author on the piece, "but the tools scientists are using to study how SARS-CoV-2 is transmitting and changing were never designed for the unique pressures - or volumes of data - of this pandemic."
SARS-CoV-2 is now one of the most sequenced pathogens of all time, with over 600,000 full-genome sequences having been generated since the pandemic began, and over 5,000 new sequences coming in from around the world every day. ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Immunotherapy drug delays onset of Type 1 diabetes in at-risk group