Summary
Betalin’s mission is to provide a tissue-derived acellular micro-scaffold that will extend the life and the insulin-producing
performance of transplanted beta cells in order to reduce or eliminate the dependence of some diabetics on insulin therapy.
Type 1 Diabetes is a chronic disease that results from the autoimmune destruction of the insulin-producing beta cells in the
pancreas. Its cause is still uncertain and there is no known way to prevent its onset. With~70,000 new cases diagnosed
each year, it is estimated that ~17 mn people worldwide are afflicted with T1DM. In the US alone, T1DM results in $14.4 bn
in medical costs and lost income annually. Type 1 diabetics face a lifetime regime of insulin therapy and very careful lifestyle
management in an attempt to mitigate the long-term complications associated with T1DM such as cardiovascular disease,
damage to the eyes, kidneys and nerves, and premature death. In recent years islet transplantation has been researched as
a treatment for T1DM. The procedure involves injecting millions of islets (the pancreatic cell clusters that “house” the
insulinproducing
beta cells) harvested from cadavers, followed by immunosuppression therapy. Islet transplantation is a promising
approach but the naked islets are very unstable: they must be transplanted almost immediately after harvesting and up to
80% of the transplanted islets stop functioning within 24hrs. The result is that, after five years, less than 10% of the
recipients are free of daily insulin treatment. Betalin’s technology is based on the premise that in order for beta cells to
function properly it is necessary to provide an appropriate stromal (connective tissue) micro-environment. The proprietary
platform technology is a method to prepare acellular organ-derived micro-scaffolds that preserve the architecture and the
basic composition of organ stroma and ensure that no seeded cell will be more than 150 microns from a source of nutrients
and gases.
performance of transplanted beta cells in order to reduce or eliminate the dependence of some diabetics on insulin therapy.
Type 1 Diabetes is a chronic disease that results from the autoimmune destruction of the insulin-producing beta cells in the
pancreas. Its cause is still uncertain and there is no known way to prevent its onset. With~70,000 new cases diagnosed
each year, it is estimated that ~17 mn people worldwide are afflicted with T1DM. In the US alone, T1DM results in $14.4 bn
in medical costs and lost income annually. Type 1 diabetics face a lifetime regime of insulin therapy and very careful lifestyle
management in an attempt to mitigate the long-term complications associated with T1DM such as cardiovascular disease,
damage to the eyes, kidneys and nerves, and premature death. In recent years islet transplantation has been researched as
a treatment for T1DM. The procedure involves injecting millions of islets (the pancreatic cell clusters that “house” the
insulinproducing
beta cells) harvested from cadavers, followed by immunosuppression therapy. Islet transplantation is a promising
approach but the naked islets are very unstable: they must be transplanted almost immediately after harvesting and up to
80% of the transplanted islets stop functioning within 24hrs. The result is that, after five years, less than 10% of the
recipients are free of daily insulin treatment. Betalin’s technology is based on the premise that in order for beta cells to
function properly it is necessary to provide an appropriate stromal (connective tissue) micro-environment. The proprietary
platform technology is a method to prepare acellular organ-derived micro-scaffolds that preserve the architecture and the
basic composition of organ stroma and ensure that no seeded cell will be more than 150 microns from a source of nutrients
and gases.
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More information & hyperlinks
Web resources: | https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/790461 |
Start date: | 01-11-2017 |
End date: | 28-02-2018 |
Total budget - Public funding: | 71 429,00 Euro - 50 000,00 Euro |
Cordis data
Original description
Betalin’s mission is to provide a tissue-derived acellular micro-scaffold that will extend the life and the insulin-producingperformance of transplanted beta cells in order to reduce or eliminate the dependence of some diabetics on insulin therapy.
Type 1 Diabetes is a chronic disease that results from the autoimmune destruction of the insulin-producing beta cells in the
pancreas. Its cause is still uncertain and there is no known way to prevent its onset. With~70,000 new cases diagnosed
each year, it is estimated that ~17 mn people worldwide are afflicted with T1DM. In the US alone, T1DM results in $14.4 bn
in medical costs and lost income annually. Type 1 diabetics face a lifetime regime of insulin therapy and very careful lifestyle
management in an attempt to mitigate the long-term complications associated with T1DM such as cardiovascular disease,
damage to the eyes, kidneys and nerves, and premature death. In recent years islet transplantation has been researched as
a treatment for T1DM. The procedure involves injecting millions of islets (the pancreatic cell clusters that “house” the
insulinproducing
beta cells) harvested from cadavers, followed by immunosuppression therapy. Islet transplantation is a promising
approach but the naked islets are very unstable: they must be transplanted almost immediately after harvesting and up to
80% of the transplanted islets stop functioning within 24hrs. The result is that, after five years, less than 10% of the
recipients are free of daily insulin treatment. Betalin’s technology is based on the premise that in order for beta cells to
function properly it is necessary to provide an appropriate stromal (connective tissue) micro-environment. The proprietary
platform technology is a method to prepare acellular organ-derived micro-scaffolds that preserve the architecture and the
basic composition of organ stroma and ensure that no seeded cell will be more than 150 microns from a source of nutrients
and gases.
Status
CLOSEDCall topic
SMEInst-02-2016-2017Update Date
27-10-2022
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H2020-EU.2.1.2. INDUSTRIAL LEADERSHIP - Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies – Nanotechnologies
H2020-EU.2.1.3. INDUSTRIAL LEADERSHIP - Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies - Advanced materials
H2020-EU.2.1.5. INDUSTRIAL LEADERSHIP - Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies - Advanced manufacturing and processing