| Literature DB >> 27471707 |
Darren Lowell Hirsch1, Punita Ponda1.
Abstract
Autoimmune diseases are common chronic disorders that not only have a major impact on the quality of life but are also potentially life-threatening. Treatment modalities that are currently favored have conferred significant clinical benefits, but they may have considerable side effects. An optimal treatment strategy for autoimmune disease would specifically target disease-associated antigens and limit systemic side effects. Similar to allergen-specific immunotherapy for allergic rhinitis, antigen-specific immunotherapy for autoimmune disease aims to induce immune deviation and promote tolerance to specific antigens. In this review, we present the current status of studies and clinical trials in both human and animal hosts that use antigen-based immunotherapy for autoimmune disease.Entities:
Keywords: antigen; autoimmune disease; diabetes; immunotherapy; multiple sclerosis; rheumatoid arthritis
Year: 2014 PMID: 27471707 PMCID: PMC4918244 DOI: 10.2147/ITT.S49656
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunotargets Ther ISSN: 2253-1556
Representative autoantigens involved in autoimmune disease
| Disease | Autoantigen |
|---|---|
| Type I diabetes | Carboxypeptidase H |
| Chromogranin A | |
| Glutamate decarboxylase | |
| Imogen-38 | |
| Insulin | |
| Insulinoma antigen-2 and 2β | |
| Islet-specific glucose-6-phosphatase catalytic subunit related protein (IGRP) | |
| Proinsulin | |
| Multiple sclerosis | α-enolase |
| Aquaporin-4 | |
| β-arrestin | |
| Myelin basic protein | |
| Myelin oligodendrocytic glycoprotein | |
| Proteolipid protein | |
| S100-β | |
| Rheumatoid arthritis | Citrullinated protein |
| Collagen II | |
| Heat shock proteins | |
| Human cartilage glycoprotein 39 | |
| Systemic lupus erythematosus | Double-stranded DNA |
| La antigen | |
| Nucleosomal histones and ribonucleoproteins (snRNP) | |
| Phospholipid-β-2 glycoprotein I complex | |
| Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase | |
| Sm antigens of U-1 small ribonucleoprotein complex |
Abbreviation: snRNP, small nuclear ribonucleoprotein.
Antigen-specific immunotherapy using insulin as the target antigen
| Treatment | Year | Patient characteristics | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oral insulin (2.5 mg or 7.5 mg daily) | 2000 | 131 patients with positive autoantibodies within 2 weeks of diagnosis of T1D | No difference between treatment groups and placebo | Chaillous et al |
| Oral insulin (5 mg daily) | 2000 | 80 patients with T1D | No difference between treatment and placebo groups | Pozzilli et al |
| Intranasal insulin (1.6 mg) | 2004 | 38 patients with autoantibodies | Intranasal insulin was safe and induced immune changes consistent with mucosal tolerance to insulin | Harrison et al |
| Intranasal insulin (1 unit/kg daily) | 2008 | 224 infants and 40 siblings with autoantibodies | No difference between treatment and placebo groups | Näntö-Salonen et al |
Abbreviation: TID, Type 1 diabetes.
Diabetes Prevention Trial-Type 1
| Treatment | Patients | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Low-dose systemic insulin administered twice daily for total dose of 0.25 U/kg/day | 372 relatives of T1D with islet cell antibodies and 26%–50% 5-year risk of developing T1D | No effect on diabetes incidence |
| Oral insulin (7.5 mg daily) | 372 relatives of T1D with islet cell antibodies and 26%–50% 5-year risk of developing T1D | No effect in major outcomes, but a subgroup analysis suggested a possible benefit in subjects with insulin autoantibody levels >80 nU/mL |
Abbreviation: TID, Type 1 diabetes.