Allergy Clinical Trial
Official title:
Immune Response of Individuals Vaccinated With Hypoallergenic Derivatives of the Major Birch Pollen Allergen, Bet v 1
The only disease-modifying treatment for allergic disorders nowadays is allergen-specific
immunotherapy (SIT). To induce hyporesponsiveness increasing doses of the disease-eliciting
allergens are applied. One major problem of this treatment is, that it has to combat with an
already established immune response against the disease-eliciting allergen. To circumvent
this problem the investigators want to perform the proof of principle study towards
prophylactic treatment. Prophylactic vaccination is used since many years for many
infectious diseases. The investigators want to adopt this successful principle for the
treatment of type I allergies.
For this purpose non-allergic healthy individuals will be immunized with adjuvant-bound
hypoallergenic derivatives of the major birch pollen allergen, Bet v 1. As usual for
allergen-specific immunotherapy, injections will be applied subcutaneously. Three injections
in one-monthly intervals will be given to establish the immune response and a further
injection after one year will determine how the vaccine-induced immune response can be
boosted.
The vaccine will be composed of an equimolar mixture of two adjuvant-bound hypoallergenic
derivatives of the major birch pollen allergen, Bet v 1. The first investigational product
(IP) designated as Bet v 1aF1 is a protein of 73 amino acid residues and represents the
first half (1-73aa) of the Bet v 1 molecule. The second IP, Bet v 1aF2, is a protein of 86
amino acid residues and represents the second half (74-160aa) of Bet v 1. Both proteins are
expressed in Escherichia coli. The hypoallergenic derivatives lost their IgE binding
capacities by the disruption of the conformational IgE epitopes of the Bet v 1 molecule.
In several preclinical and clinical studies it has been shown that the two hypoallergenic
fragments, Bet v 1aF1 and Bet v 1aF2 have a strongly reduced allergenic reactivity and
almost no sensitization potential, requisite for a prophylactic treatment. In a multi-centre
placebo-controlled double blind clinical trial including 124 allergic patients no relevant
sensitization against new epitopes could be observed after vaccination of the Alum-bound Bet
v 1 derivatives.
In contrast, the vaccine induced a strong IgG response in animals as well as in clinical
studies. Vaccine-induced antibodies showed protective properties as they could inhibit the
binding of allergic patients' IgE. An improvement of clinical symptoms and a reduction of
the skin reactivity was correlated with an increase of IgG antibodies and could be shown
only in actively treated patients in a multi-centre placebo-controlled double blind clinical
trial.
The investigational products will be tested in a Phase I clinical trial for prophylactic
allergy vaccination in healthy non-allergic subjects. The two IPs will be coupled either to
Alum and an equimolar mixture will be injected subcutaneously. The immune responses will be
compared to placebo. In total 20 non-allergic healthy male subjects (10 per group) will be
included in this clinical trial. For safety precautions the subjects will be monitored by
skin prick testing using the two uncoupled IPs and commercial birch pollen extract in short
intervals to recognize possible vaccine-induced sensitizations. The primary endpoint of
phase I clinical trial is the evolution of Bet v 1-specific and Bet v 1 fragment-specific
IgG1-4, IgE and IgM antibody levels in serum and in nasal fluids after vaccination of rBet v
1 derivatives.
n/a
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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