Integrated histopathology of the human pancreas throughout stages of type 1 diabetes progression

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Abstract

Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is a progressive autoimmune condition that culminates in the loss of insulin-producing beta cells. Pancreatic histopathology provides essential insights into disease initiation and progression yet an integrated perspective of in situ pathogenic processes is lacking due to limited sample availability, the dispersed nature of anatomical lesions, and often restricted analytical dimensionality. Here, we combined multiplexed immunostaining, high-magnification whole-slide imaging, digital pathology, and semi-automated image analysis strategies to interrogate pancreatic tail and head regions obtained from organ donors across T1D stages including at-risk and at-onset cases. Deconvolution of architectural features, endocrine cell composition, immune cell burden, and spatial relations of ∼25,000 islets revealed a series of novel histopathological correlates especially in the prodromal disease stage preceding clinical T1D. Altogether, our comprehensive “single-islet” analyses permit the reconstruction of a revised natural T1D history with implications for further histopathological investigations, considerations of pathogenetic modalities, and therapeutic interventions.

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