Today, Sana Biotechnology released significant clinical data: the first person with type 1 diabetes (T1D) who received deceased donor islets engineered to evade the immune system is producing insulin without immunosuppression.
The details
This is a big step for cell-based therapies for T1D. Sana’s first-in-human study consists of allogeneic islets, meaning they are derived from an external source, which in this case is the pancreases of deceased donors. These islets were engineered to avoid recognition by the immune system (hypoimmune) and were implanted intramuscularly into a person with T1D. After four weeks, circulating C-peptide increased, meaning that the beta cells are alive, healthy, and producing insulin—all without the need for immunosuppression and no safety issue. This is the first evidence of engineered islets successfully avoiding immune destruction.
What this means for the T1D community
While this is an incredibly promising step forward for the T1D community, currently available cell therapies that rely on deceased donor islets (Lantidra®) are only accessible to a small portion of the T1D population because there are very few donor cells available. They also require broad anti-rejection immunosuppressants, which can come with serious side effects that may not be manageable for everyone with T1D. Engineering cells to evade immune attack is a new path forward to protect the insulin-producing beta cells and avoid the use of immunosuppressants. Most importantly, this technology can now be applied to stem cell-based therapies, which is a scalable solution for many people with T1D.
What’s next: lots to look forward to
Breakthrough T1D believes that the best bet for T1D cures lies in stem cell-based therapies since deceased donor islets are in short supply, while stem cell-derived islets can be produced at scale. We have now opened the doors to apply hypoimmune technology to stem cell-derived islets, moving us closer to the possibility of having enough immune-evading cells for everyone with T1D. While this will take significant time, effort, and money, every day we take another step toward a possible life-changing T1D cure.
Breakthrough T1D’s Role
The primary objective of Breakthrough T1D’s beta cell replacement efforts is to place insulin-producing cells into people with T1D without the use of immunosuppressants. Breakthrough T1D strongly supports the development of stem cell-based therapies that do not require broad immunosuppression and recently launched an initiative to accelerate this faster than ever (Project ACT – Accelerate Cell Therapies). To contribute to the advancement of these game-changing therapies, the T1D Fund: A Breakthrough T1D Venture invested in Sana recognizing that their hypoimmune engineering technology held significant promise for T1D cell therapies. We look forward to seeing how the trial progresses.