4.5 Article

Proinsulin peptide immunotherapy in type 1 diabetes: report of a first-in-man Phase I safety study

Journal

CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 155, Issue 2, Pages 156-165

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2249.2008.03814.x

Keywords

immunotherapy; peptide; proinsulin; regulatory T cells; type 1 diabetes

Categories

Funding

  1. Diabetes Vaccine Development Centre, Australia working in concert with the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation
  2. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia
  3. Department of Health via the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)

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Immunotherapeutic strategies under consideration for type 1 diabetes include modification of the autoimmune response through antigen-specific routes. Administration of short peptides representing T cell epitopes targeted by patients with the disease represents one approach. This study evaluated safety and mechanistic outcomes during first-in-man intradermal administration of a human leucocyte antigen-DR4 (HLA-DR4)-restricted peptide epitope of proinsulin (C19-A3). This randomized, open-label study assessed two major theoretical risks of peptide immunotherapy, namely induction of allergic hypersensitivity and exacerbation of the proinflammatory autoimmune response, using clinical assessment and mechanistic assays in vitro. Patients with long-standing type 1 diabetes and HLA-DRB1*0401 genotype received 30 mu g (n = 18) or 300 mu g (n = 18) of peptide in three equal doses at 0, 1 and 2 months or no intervention (n = 12). Proinsulin peptide immunotherapy in the dosing regimen used is well tolerated and free from risk of systemic hypersensitivity and induction/reactivation of proinsulin-specific, proinflammatory T cells. Peptide-specific T cells secreting the immune suppressive cytokine interleukin (IL)-10 were observed at month 3 in four of 18 patients in the low-dose group (versus one of 12 in the control group; P = not significant). Mean IL-10 response to peptide in the low-dose group increased between 0 and 3 months (P = 0.05 after stimulation with 5 mu M peptide in vitro) and then declined to baseline levels between 3 and 6 months (P = 0.01 at 10 mu M peptide in vitro). These studies pave the way for future investigations in new-onset patients designed to examine whether proinsulin peptide immunotherapy has beneficial effects on markers of T cell autoimmunity and preservation of beta cell mass.

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