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[ PAPER ] · 2024 · Nature reviews. Immunology

The immunology of type 1 diabetes

K. Herold, Thomas Delong, A. Perdigoto, Noah Biru, T. Brusko, L. Walker

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[ TLDR ]

The immune mechanisms that underpin T1D are examined and an overview of immune-targeted strategies for T1D that are currently in development is provided, with a particular emphasis on T cells.

[ ABSTRACT ]

Following the seminal discovery of insulin a century ago, treatment of individuals with type 1 diabetes (T1D) has been largely restricted to efforts to monitor and treat metabolic glucose dysregulation. The recent regulatory approval of the first immunotherapy that targets T cells as a means to delay the autoimmune destruction of pancreatic β-cells highlights the critical role of the immune system in disease pathogenesis and tends to pave the way for other immune-targeted interventions for T1D. Improving the efficacy of such interventions across the natural history of the disease will probably require a more detailed understanding of the immunobiology of T1D, as well as technologies to monitor residual β-cell mass and function. Here we provide an overview of the immune mechanisms that underpin the pathogenesis of T1D, with a particular emphasis on T cells. The first immune-targeted drug for type 1 diabetes (T1D), teplizumab, received regulatory approval by the US FDA in 2022. In this Review, Herold, Walker and colleagues examine the immune mechanisms that underpin T1D and provide an overview of immune-targeted strategies for T1D that are currently in development.