landmark Study Shows Oral โขInsulin Delays Type 1โ Diabetes in High-Risk โฃChildren
MUNICH,GERMANY – November 16,2025 – In a groundbreaking โคadvancement for type 1 diabetes prevention,the POInT study,a randomized,double-blind,placebo-controlled clinical trial,has demonstrated thatโข oral insulinโค administration can significantly delay the onset of type 1 diabetes in children atโค increased genetic risk. the results, released today by researchers at โhelmholtz Munich, offerโฃ a potential new avenue for interveningโฃ in the โautoimmune process that leads to the disease.
The POInT trial involved โค143 โคchildren genetically predisposed to type 1 diabetes,โค who received โขeither โข7.5 micrograms of โคoral insulin daily (escalating to .5 mg withinโ four months) or a placebo until the age of three. Researchers followed the participants until theyโฃ reached six years andโ six months โคof age,โ meticulously tracking the development of islet autoimmunity – the early stage โคof type 1 diabetes.
The study, led โขby Prof.Anette-Gabriele Ziegler, Director of the Institute for Diabetes Research at Helmholtz Munich and Chair ofโฃ Diabetes and Gestational Diabetes at the TUM Klinikum,โ and prof. Ezio Bonifacio, a member of โthe GPPAD study group โฃand professor at theโฃ Centre โฃforโ Regenerative Therapies atโข TU Dresden, โขrepresents the first of its โฃkind to examine the impact of oral insulin on this vulnerable โpopulation.
“These findings are a majorโ step forward in our effortsโฃ to prevent type 1 diabetes,” said Prof.Ziegler. “By intervening early with oral insulin, we can potentially delay โor even prevent the disease from developing in children at high risk.”
The POInT trial is a key initiativeโ of the Global Platform for the Prevention of Autoimmune Diabetes (GPPAD), a European platform dedicated to identifying at-risk children and conducting primary prevention studies. GPPAD is โcurrently recruiting for โขits third clinical trial, โAVAnT1A, focused on antiviralโข approaches to type 1 diabetes autoimmunity, following theโ POInTโข and SINT1A trials. GPPAD research centers are located across Europe, including โคBelgium, Germany, Sweden,โ Great Britain, and Austria.
The research was made possible through importent funding โคfrom the Leona M.and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust, which has committed over $1 billion to type โ1 diabetes research and care โglobally. Helmsley โis the largest private โคfunder of type 1 diabetes initiatives worldwide.
Helmholtz Munich,โฃ a leading biomedical research center with approximately 2,500 employees, focuses on โขdeveloping solutions for a healthier โsociety,โฃ with a particular emphasis on environmentally caused diseases like โdiabetes, obesity,โข and allergies. Theโค center utilizes artificial intelligence and bioengineering to accelerate the translationโ of research findings into patient care.
Further Information:
* Helmholtz Munich: https://www.helmholtz-munich.de/
* Helmsley Charitable Trust: https://helmsleytrust.org