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Clinical Trial Summary

Easing the morbidity and economic burden of age-related diseases is one of the major medical challenges. One of the key obstacles to healthy ageing is immune senescence, including the failure of lymphocytes to respond adequately to infection, malignancy and vaccination. Infectious diseases remain the fourth most common cause of death among the elderly in the developed world. Moreover, the gain of chronic low-grade non-specific inflammation with age contributes to many age-related diseases. Our early work showed that autophagy, the main cellular bulk degradation pathway in the cell, prevents ageing of the immune system. In preclinical models we showed an age-related decline in T cell autophagy. We rejuvenated the immune system by restoring autophagy in T and B cells with the autophagy-inducing metabolite spermidine. Here we are asking for matched funds for a small human clinical trial to confirm that spermidine has the same effect when administered to humans. We will give the nutraceutical spermidine to human volunteers aged >65 years either during or after vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 or influenza to test improvement of vaccine responses, immune senescence and inflamm-aging. We will also confirm whether a novel pathway we discovered that links spermidine to autophagy operates in humans, allowing us to make more specific drugs in the future. This small study of 120 volunteers overall will pave the way for a larger clinical trial with spermidine or novel related drugs.


Clinical Trial Description

The outbreak of SARS-CoV-2 and coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has caused a great threat to global public health with the majority of deaths occurring in older adults. The development of effective treatments and vaccines against COVID-19 has become a pressing and urgent challenge to overcome. Successful protective immune responses stimulated by vaccination of older people (people aged greater than 65 years old) against pathogens is considered one of the big challenges in our society. Immune senescence is thought to be important in the reduced immune response that has been widely observed, following immunization of older adults. This is characterized by poor induction and recall of B and T cell memory responses upon exposure to viruses and vaccines. Most vaccines are less immunogenic effective in the older population, in particular influenza vaccines. Autophagy is thought to be one of the few cellular processes that underlie many facets of cellular aging including immune senescence. Autophagy delivers 'unwanted' cytoplasmic material to lysosomes inside a cell for degradation. Autophagy also limits mitochondrial dysfunction and accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Deletion of key autophagy genes leads to a change in cellular immunity, with loss of function in mouse memory CD8+ T cells, hematopoietic stem cells, and macrophages. We have seen that autophagy levels also decline with age in human peripheral CD8+ T cells and correlate with vaccine responses. Importantly, we have demonstrated that we can improve CD8+ T memory responses in aged mice with a supplement called spermidine. Spermidine is a metabolite synthesised from arginine. It is commonly found in wheatgerm and soya and is available in the United Kingdom (UK) as a nutritional food supplement, often described as a polyamine. It's safety and tolerability has been studied and no adverse effects have been demonstrated and it is readily available to buy from mainstream retail companies e.g. Amazon. Our data showed for the first time that autophagy is indeed highly active in human CD8+ T cells in two different experimental vaccination trials. Polyamine levels also fall with age in peripheral mononuclear cells. When supplemented with spermidine, the autophagic function can be rejuvenated in CD8+ T cells from old donors, and levels of the important effector molecules increased. As a consequence, the immune response is enhanced. Moreover, autophagy and effector function are maintained by spermidine in T cells from young donors. This demonstrates that the function of human CD8+ T cells can be improved with spermidine. Taken together with our previous work on B cells, this leads us to the hypothesis that both T and B cell responses to infections and vaccinations are exquisitely reliant on sufficient autophagy levels, which are maintained by intracellular spermidine. This work highlights the potential of spermidine as a vaccine adjuvant in the older adults. This phase 1, double-blinded, randomised controlled trial is designed as a feasibility study to examine the safety of Spermidine supplements and its effects on the immune response (antibodies) to COVID vaccine in older people. AIMS AND OBJECTIVES The primary objective of this feasibility study is to determine the safety of daily Spermidine supplements following vaccination for Coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) and a booster and its effects on antibody levels in older people, using validated assays. Our secondary objective is to determine the effects of daily Spermidine supplements on the immune 'memory' response to Coronavirus vaccine and a booster in older people. We will examine if Spermidine improves the duration of the antibody-mediated immune response after the Coronavirus vaccine/booster with validated assays and then determine the molecular and immunological signature driving immunity. We will also use data collected to perform a power calculation for future larger studies. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05421546
Study type Interventional
Source University of Oxford
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date August 1, 2022
Completion date December 2, 2023

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