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  • Russell, William E; Bundy, Brian N; Anderson, Mark S; Cooney, Laura A; Gitelman, Stephen E; Goland, Robin S; Gottlieb, Peter A; Greenbaum, Carla J; Haller, Michael J; Krischer, Jeffrey P; Libman, Ingrid M; Linsley, Peter S; Long, S Alice; Lord, Sandra M; Moore, Daniel J; Moore, Wayne V; Moran, Antoinette M; Muir, Andrew B; Raskin, Philip; Skyler, Jay S; Wentworth, John M; Wherrett, Diane K; Wilson, Darrell M; Ziegler, Anette-Gabriele; Herold, Kevan C

    Diabetes care, 05/2023, Letnik: 46, Številka: 5
    Journal Article

    Previous studies showed that inhibiting lymphocyte costimulation reduces declining β-cell function in individuals newly diagnosed with type 1 diabetes. We tested whether abatacept would delay or prevent progression of type 1 diabetes from normal glucose tolerance (NGT) to abnormal glucose tolerance (AGT) or to diabetes and the effects of treatment on immune and metabolic responses. We conducted a phase 2, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-masked trial of abatacept in antibody-positive participants with NGT who received monthly abatacept/placebo infusions for 12 months. The end point was AGT or diabetes, assessed by oral glucose tolerance tests. A total of 101 participants received abatacept and 111 placebo. Of these, 81 (35 abatacept and 46 placebo) met the end point of AGT or type 1 diabetes diagnosis (hazard ratio 0.702; 95% CI 0.452, 1.09; P = 0.11) The C-peptide responses to oral glucose tolerance tests were higher in the abatacept arm (P < 0.03). Abatacept reduced the frequency of inducible T-cell costimulatory (ICOS)+ PD1+ T-follicular helper (Tfh) cells during treatment (P < 0.0001), increased naive CD4+ T cells, and also reduced the frequency of CD4+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) from the baseline (P = 0.0067). Twelve months after treatment, the frequency of ICOS+ Tfh, naive CD4+ T cells, and Tregs returned to baseline. Although abatacept treatment for 1 year did not significantly delay progression to glucose intolerance in at-risk individuals, it impacted immune cell subsets and preserved insulin secretion, suggesting that costimulation blockade may modify progression of type 1 diabetes.