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Dive into the research topics where Bart Keymeulen is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Bart Keymeulen.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Cellular islet autoimmunity associates with clinical outcome of islet cell transplantation

Volkert Huurman; Robert Hilbrands; Gabriëlle G. M. Pinkse; Pieter Gillard; Gaby Duinkerken; Pieter van de Linde; Petronella M. W. van der Meer-Prins; Minke F. J. Versteeg-van der Voort Maarschalk; Koen Verbeeck; Behrooz Z. Alizadeh; Chantal Mathieu; Frans K. Gorus; Dave L. Roelen; Frans H. J. Claas; Bart Keymeulen; Daniel Pipeleers; Bart O. Roep

Background Islet cell transplantation can cure type 1 diabetes (T1D), but only a minority of recipients remains insulin–independent in the following years. We tested the hypothesis that allograft rejection and recurrent autoimmunity contribute to this progressive loss of islet allograft function. Methodology/Principal Findings Twenty-one T1D patients received cultured islet cell grafts prepared from multiple donors and transplanted under anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG) induction and tacrolimus plus mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) maintenance immunosuppression. Immunity against auto- and alloantigens was measured before and during one year after transplantation. Cellular auto- and alloreactivity was assessed by lymphocyte stimulation tests against autoantigens and cytotoxic T lymphocyte precursor assays, respectively. Humoral reactivity was measured by auto- and alloantibodies. Clinical outcome parameters - including time until insulin independence, insulin independence at one year, and C-peptide levels over one year- remained blinded until their correlation with immunological parameters. All patients showed significant improvement of metabolic control and 13 out of 21 became insulin-independent. Multivariate analyses showed that presence of cellular autoimmunity before and after transplantation is associated with delayed insulin-independence (p = 0.001 and p = 0.01, respectively) and lower circulating C-peptide levels during the first year after transplantation (p = 0.002 and p = 0.02, respectively). Seven out of eight patients without pre-existent T-cell autoreactivity became insulin-independent, versus none of the four patients reactive to both islet autoantigens GAD and IA-2 before transplantation. Autoantibody levels and cellular alloreactivity had no significant association with outcome. Conclusions/Significance In this cohort study, cellular islet-specific autoimmunity associates with clinical outcome of islet cell transplantation under ATG-tacrolimus-MMF immunosuppression. Tailored immunotherapy targeting cellular islet autoreactivity may be required. Monitoring cellular immune reactivity can be useful to identify factors influencing graft survival and to assess efficacy of immunosuppression. Trial Registration Clinicaltrials.gov NCT00623610


American Journal of Transplantation | 2009

Allograft-specific cytokine profiles associate with clinical outcome after islet cell transplantation.

Volkert Huurman; J H L Velthuis; Robert Hilbrands; Timothy Tree; Pieter Gillard; P M W van der Meer-Prins; Gaby Duinkerken; G G M Pinkse; Bart Keymeulen; Dave L. Roelen; Frans H. J. Claas; Daniel Pipeleers; Bart O. Roep

Islet cell transplantation can cure type 1 diabetes, but allograft rejection and recurrent autoimmunity may contribute to decreasing insulin independence over time. In this study we report the association of allograft‐specific proliferative and cytokine profiles with clinical outcome.


Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2016

Boost for Alginate Encapsulation in Beta Cell Transplantation.

Daniel Pipeleers; Bart Keymeulen

A recent study reported that encapsulation of human embryonic stem cell (hESC)-derived beta cells by a novel alginate formula protects against foreign body reactivity in immune-competent mice. Intraperitoneal implants corrected a diabetic state for at least 6 months. These observations will stimulate the development of alginate encapsulation towards novel cell therapy protocols for treating type 1 diabetes (T1DM).


Cell Transplantation | 2017

Identification of donor origin and condition of transplanted islets in situ in the liver of a type 1 diabetic recipient.

Cornelis R. van der Torren; Jessica S. Suwandi; Dahae Lee; Ernst-Jan T. Van't Wout; Gaby Duinkerken; Godelieve Swings; Arend Mulder; Frans H.J. Claas; Zhidong Ling; Pieter Gillard; Bart Keymeulen; Peter In't Veld; Bart O. Roep

Transplantation of islet allografts into type 1 diabetic recipients usually requires multiple pancreas donors to achieve insulin independence. This adds to the challenges of immunological monitoring of islet transplantation currently relying on surrogate immune markers in peripheral blood. We investigated donor origin and infiltration of islets transplanted in the liver of a T1D patient who died of hemorrhagic stroke 4 months after successful transplantation with two intraportal islet grafts combining six donors. Immunohistological staining for donor HLA using a unique panel of human monoclonal HLA-specific alloantibodies was performed on liver cryosections after validation on cryopreserved kidney, liver, and pancreas and compared with auto- and alloreactive T-cell immunity in peripheral blood. HLA-specific staining intensity and signal-to-noise ratio varied between tissues from very strong on kidney glomeruli, less in liver, kidney tubuli, and endocrine pancreas to least in exocrine pancreas, complicating the staining of inflamed islets in an HLA-disparate liver. Nonetheless, five islets from different liver lobes could be attributed to donors 1, 2, and 5 by staining patterns with multiple HLA types. All islets showed infiltration with CD8+ cytotoxic T cells that was mirrored by progressive alloreactive responses in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) to donors 1, 2, and 5 after transplantation. Stably low rates of peripheral islet autoreactive T-cell responses after islet infusion fit with a complete HLA mismatch between grafts and recipient and exclude the possibility that the islet-infiltrating CD8 T cells were autoreactive. HLA-specific immunohistochemistry can identify donor origin in situ and differentiate graft dysfunction and immunological destruction.


Diabetes Care | 2000

Use of an islet cell antibody assay to identify type 1 diabetic patients with rapid decrease in C-peptide levels after clinical onset. Belgian Diabetes Registry.

Katelijn Decochez; Bart Keymeulen; Guido Somers; Harry Dorchy; I. De Leeuw; Chantal Mathieu; Raoul Rottiers; Frederic Winnock; K ver Elst; Ilse Weets; Leonard Kaufman; D Pipeleers; Belgian Diabetes Registry


Diabetologia | 2013

In antibody-positive first-degree relatives of patients with type 1 diabetes, HLA-A*24 and HLA-B*18, but not HLA-B*39, are predictors of impending diabetes with distinct HLA-DQ interactions

Eric Mbunwe; B. Van der Auwera; Ilse Weets; P Van Crombrugge; Laurent Crenier; M. Coeckelberghs; N. Seret; K Decochez; E. Vandemeulebroucke; Pieter Gillard; Bart Keymeulen; C. Van Schravendijk; Janet M. Wenzlau; John C. Hutton; Daniel Pipeleers; Frans K. Gorus


Revue médicale de Liège | 2009

ANTICORPS MONOCLONAUX EN DIABÉTOLOGIE: jusqu'au bout du rêve ?

Jean-Christophe Philips; Bart Keymeulen; Chantal Mathieu; André Scheen


Acta Clinica Belgica | 1999

Insulin lispro (Humalog) in the treatment of diabetes mellitus: overview of belgian clinical data from global studies.

Mieke Bex; M. Buysschaert; I. De Leeuw; J. De Schepper; Françoise Fery; Michel P. Hermans; Bart Keymeulen; J. P. Lauvaux; Michel Letiexhe; Chantal Mathieu; Frank Nobels; Raoul Rottiers; André Scheen; H. Schmitt; P. Van Crombrugge; L. Van Gaal


Archive | 2011

A-2b and Zinc Transporter 8 to Classification of Diabetes Diagnosed Under 40 Years of Age

Ilse Vermeulen; Ilse Weets; Milca Asanghanwa; Johannes Ruige; Luc Van Gaal; Chantal Mathieu; Bart Keymeulen; Vito Lampasona; Janet M. Wenzlau; John C. Hutton; Daniel Pipeleers; Frans K. Gorus


Archive | 2009

Differences in Baseline Lymphocyte Counts and Autoreactivity are associated with Differences in Outcome of Islet Cell Transplantation in Type 1 Diabetic Patients Short running title: Lymphocytes in Islet transplantation

Robert Hilbrands; Volkert Huurman; Pieter Gillard; Jurjen H.L. Velthuis; Chantal Mathieu; Leonard Kaufman; Miriam Pipeleers-Marichal; Zhidong Ling; Babak Movahedi; Daniel Jacobs-Tulleneers-Thevissen; Diethard Monbaliu; Dirk Ysebaert; Frans K. Gorus; Bart Roep; Daniel Pipeleers; Bart Keymeulen; Universitair Ziekenhuis Gasthuisberg

Collaboration


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Chantal Mathieu

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Daniel Pipeleers

Université catholique de Louvain

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Ilse Weets

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Daniel Pipeleers

Université catholique de Louvain

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Bart O. Roep

Beckman Research Institute

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Gaby Duinkerken

Leiden University Medical Center

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Volkert Huurman

Leiden University Medical Center

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