| Literature DB >> 31501122 |
Barbara Willekens1,2, Silvia Presas-Rodríguez3,4, Nathalie Cools5,6, Cristina Ramo-Tello7, M J Mansilla8,9, Judith Derdelinckx1,2, Wai-Ping Lee6, Griet Nijs6, Maxime De Laere2, Inez Wens2, Patrick Cras1, Paul Parizel10, Wim Van Hecke11, Annemie Ribbens11, Thibo Billiet11, Geert Adams12, Marie-Madeleine Couttenye13, Juan Navarro-Barriuso8,9, Aina Teniente-Serra8,9, Bibiana Quirant-Sánchez8,9, Ascensión Lopez-Diaz de Cerio14,15, Susana Inogés14,15, Felipe Prosper14,16, Anke Kip17, Herman Verheij17, Catharina C Gross18,19, Heinz Wiendl18,19, Marieke Sm Van Ham20,21, Anja Ten Brinke20,21, Ana Maria Barriocanal22,23, Anna Massuet-Vilamajó24, Niel Hens25,26, Zwi Berneman2,6, Eva Martínez-Cáceres8.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Based on the advances in the treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS), currently available disease-modifying treatments (DMT) have positively influenced the disease course of MS. However, the efficacy of DMT is highly variable and increasing treatment efficacy comes with a more severe risk profile. Hence, the unmet need for safer and more selective treatments remains. Specifically restoring immune tolerance towards myelin antigens may provide an attractive alternative. In this respect, antigen-specific tolerisation with autologous tolerogenic dendritic cells (tolDC) is a promising approach. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Here, we will evaluate the clinical use of tolDC in a well-defined population of MS patients in two phase I clinical trials. In doing so, we aim to compare two ways of tolDC administration, namely intradermal and intranodal. The cells will be injected at consecutive intervals in three cohorts receiving incremental doses of tolDC, according to a best-of-five design. The primary objective is to assess the safety and feasibility of tolDC administration. For safety, the number of adverse events including MRI and clinical outcomes will be assessed. For feasibility, successful production of tolDC will be determined. Secondary endpoints include clinical and MRI outcome measures. The patients' immune profile will be assessed to find presumptive evidence for a tolerogenic effect in vivo. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethics approval was obtained for the two phase I clinical trials. The results of the trials will be disseminated in a peer-reviewed journal, at scientific conferences and to patient associations. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBERS: NCT02618902 and NCT02903537; EudraCT numbers: 2015-002975-16 and 2015-003541-26. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: clinical trials; immunology; magnetic resonance imaging; multiple sclerosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31501122 PMCID: PMC6738722 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030309
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Overview of clinical trials using tolDC as therapeutic intervention in autoimmune diseases
| Reference | Indication | Study design | Number of patients | Cell product and control condition | Dose | Administration mode | Primary outcome measure | Results | Immunological effects |
| Zubizarreta | MS and NMO | open-label, dose-escalation, phase Ib | 8 MS and 4 NMO | autologous tolDC loaded with either myelin peptides or AQP4 | 50×106, 100×106, 150×106, and 300×106 tolDC in total, separated in three independent doses administered every 2 weeks | intravenous | safety and tolerability | well tolerated no serious adverse events | ↑ IL-10 production in peptide-stimulated PBMCs and ↑ in the frequency of Tr1 |
| Bell | Inflammatory arthritis | unblinded, dose-escalation, randomised, phase I | 9 | autologous tolDC loaded with autologous synovial fluid as a source of autoantigens | 1×106, 3×106 or 10×106 tolDC arthroscopically vs saline only | intra-articular | flare of disease in the target knee within 5 days of treatment | no target knee flares within 5 days of treatment | no consistent immunomodulatory effects in peripheral blood |
| Benham | Rheumatoid arthritis | open-label, controlled, phase I | 34 | autologous DCs modified with a nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) inhibitor exposed to four citrullinated peptide antigens, designated “Rheumavax,” | a low dose of 1×106 DCs and a high dose of 5×106 | intradermal | safety | mild adverse events | ↑ in effector T cells and an ↑ ratio of regulatory to effector T cells; ↓ in serum interleukin-15 (IL-15), IL-29, CX3CL1, and CXCL11; ↓ T cell IL-6 responses to vimentin 447-455-Cit450 relative to controls |
| Jauregui-Amezaga | Crohn's disease | open-label, dose-escalation, phase I | 9 | autologous tolDC | first three cohorts: a single injection of 2×106, 5 x 106 or 10 x 106 tolDC; last three cohorts: 3 bi-weekly injections (same dose escalation schedule) | intraperitoneal | safety | no adverse effects | |
| Giannoukakis | Diabetes type 1 | randomised, double-blind, phase I | 10 | autologous unmanipulated dendritic cells or tolDC | 10×106 cells once every 2 weeks for a total of four administrations | intradermal | safety | no adverse effects | ↑ in the frequency of peripheral B220+CD11c- B cells |
CXCL, Chemokine Ligand; DC, dendritic cells; Il, Interleukin; MS, multiple sclerosis; NMO, neuromyelitis optica; PBMC, Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cell; tolDC, tolerogenic dendritic cells; Tr1, Regulatory T-cell type.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria. All the inclusion criteria must be fulfilled. The presence of any of the exclusion criteria shall exclude the patient
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
| MS according to most recent McDonald criteria | Previous use of immunosuppressive or cytostatic treatment, including mitoxantrone, cladribine, alemtuzumab or bone marrow transplantation or stem cell transplantation at any time prior to enrolment |
| Age 18–60 years | Treatment with fingolimod or natalizumab or dimethylfumarate in the past 12 weeks or teriflunomide within the past 15 weeks or ocrelizumab/rituximab within the past 6 months prior to the first administration |
| EDSS of 0–6.5 inclusive | Pregnancy or planning pregnancy in the next 12 months and breast feeding |
| First signs or symptoms at least 3 months prior to enrolment in the study | Drug or alcohol abuse |
| Active MS (relapsing and/or progressive): one relapse in the past year and/or at least one enhancing lesion on brain MRI in the past year; at least one new or enlarging T2 lesion in comparison with a reference scan from maximum 1 year before | Inability to undergo MRI assessments |
| Normal peripheral B-cell count after treatment with ocrelizumab | |
| No evidence of relapse for at least 30 days prior to start of screening and throughout during the screening phase | History of or actual signs of immunodeficiency or malignancies |
| Positive T cell reactivity response to a mix of seven myelin-derived peptides | Concurrent clinically relevant cardiac, immunological, pulmonary, neurological, renal or other major disease |
| Able to sign informed consent and comply with the protocol assessments | Active or chronic infection (hepatitis B or C, HIV, syphilis or tuberculosis) |
| No wish to be treated with currently available DMT | Splenectomy |
| Appropriate venous access and *adequate cervical lymph nodes on ultrasound mapping | |
| Use of adequate contraceptive measures. Women of childbearing potential can only be included in the study following use of adequate contraceptive measures. Accepted methods of contraception include use of hormonal contraceptives (oral, intravaginal, intrauterine or transdermal), intrauterine devices, sterilisation or postmenopausal status, use of condoms with spermicide. |
*Only in TOLERVIT-MS.
DMT, disease-modifying treatments; EDSS, Expanded Disability Status Scale; MRI, Magnetic Resonance Imaging; MS, multiple sclerosis.
Outline of the cell doses and patient numbers, per phase I clinical trial, in the dose escalation cohorts for intradermal and intranodal administration of tolDC
| Cohort | Treatment regimen | Patient numbers |
| 1 | 6 i.d./i.n. injections of 5×106 tolDC | N=3 (+1+1) |
| 2 | 6 i.d./i.n. injections of 10×106 tolDC | N=3 (+1+1) |
| 3 | 6 i.d./i.n. injections of 15×106 tolDC | N=3 (+1+1) |
N, number; i.d., intradermal; i.n., intranodal; tolDC, tolerogenic dendritic cells.
Figure 1Study design. Treatment will start at V1, approximately 4 weeks after the leukapheresis. Patients will receive additionalinjections on week +2 (V2), week +4 (V3), week +6 (V4), week +10 (V5) and week +14 (V6). Patients will have follow up visits one month, and 3, 6 and 12 months following the last study treatment.
Study calendar. The different visits, examinations, tests and the tolDC administration are detailed on the tabular study schedule overview.
| Screening | Treatment period | Safety follow-up | |||||||||||
| Ts | Baseline (T0) | V1 | V1 +1 day | V2 | V3 | V4 | V5 | V6 | F1 | F3 | F6 | F12 | |
| Informed consent | · | ||||||||||||
| Inclusion and exclusion criteria | · | ||||||||||||
| IFN-γ EliSPOT (T cell reactivity assay) | · | · | ·+1w | ·+1w | · | ||||||||
| Leukapheresis | · | ||||||||||||
| TolDC preparation | · | ||||||||||||
| TolDC treatment | · | · | · | · | · | · | |||||||
| Patient evaluation: | |||||||||||||
| Vital signs (HR, BP, …) | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | |
| ECG | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | |
| Blood analysis for safety (1×5 mL EDTA tube and 2×10 mL serum tubes) | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | |
| Urine pregnancy test | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | |
| Full neurological examination | · | · | |||||||||||
| Pain score after treatment injection | · | · | · | · | · | · | |||||||
| MRI | · | · | · | · | ·+1w | ·+1w | ·+1w | · | · | · | |||
| Immunomonitoring | · | ·+1w | ·+1w | · | |||||||||
| Biobanking for follow-up immunomonitoring | |||||||||||||
| (Serious) Adverse events and concomitant medication | Continuous | ||||||||||||
BP, Blood Pressure; ECG, Electrocardiogram; EDSS, Expanded Disability Status Scale; 9-HPT, 9 Hole Peg Test; MRI, Magnetic Resonance Imaging; MSQOL-54, Multiple Sclerosis Quality of Life-54; SDMT, Symbol Digit Modalities Test; T25FW, Timed 25 Foot Walk; tolDC, tolerogenic dendritic cells.