Latest News

May 17, 2013

ITN Transplant Data to be Presented at American Transplant Congress (ATC) Meeting in Seattle, WA

Sandy Feng, MD, PhD (University of California, San Francisco) will present 5-year follow-up data on tolerant patients from the Immune Tolerance Network’s (ITN’s) WISP-R study, “Withdrawal of Immunosuppression in Pediatric Liver Transplant Recipients” next week at the annual American Transplant Congress (ATC) meeting in Seattle, WA. The talk will report on donor-specific antibody (DSA) in relation to 5-year outcomes.  The primary results from the WISP-R study were reported last year in The Journal of the American Medical Association.

May 9, 2013

An Update on Tolerant Kidney Transplant Recipients

A letter published today in the New England Journal of Medicine reports on the long-term outcomes of patients from two ITN-sponsored combined kidney and bone marrow transplantation studies led by David H. Sachs, MD (Massachusetts General Hospital), Tatsuo Kawai, MD, PhD (Massachusetts General Hospital), Megan Sykes, MD (Columbia University) and A. Benedict Cosimi, MD (Massachusetts General Hospital). The goal of these studies was to create recipient tolerance of the donor kidney by first creating a temporary donor-host “chimeric” immune system via hematopoietic stem cell transplant. The first study enrolled five patients, and a subsequent (slightly modified) study enrolled another five patients.

May 7, 2013

New Publication: High-throughput Gene Sequencing to Estimate T cell Populations

The quantification of mature T cell subsets is an important prognostic marker for understanding disease. Killer T cells and Helper T cells, characterized by the expression of cell surface marker proteins CD8 or CD4, respectively, effect different aspects of the adaptive immune system, and the ratio of these two populations can reveal important information about the state of the immune system. In a manuscript published recently in the Journal of Immunological Methods, ITN researchers worked with Adaptive Biotechnologies to conduct high-throughput deep sequencing of T cell receptors (TCRs) using their ImmunoSEQTM platform.

April 18, 2013

RAVE Study Data Presented at 16th International Vasculitis & ANCA Workshop in Paris

Three abstracts from the ITN’s RAVE study (Rituximab for the Treatment of ANCA-Associated Vasculitis and Microscopic Polyangiitis) led by John Stone, MD (Massachusetts General Hospital) and Ulrich Specks, MD (Mayo Clinic) were presented this week by the RAVE team at the 16th International Vasculitis & ANCA Workshop in Paris, France. These abstracts include.

April 11, 2013

ITN’s TrialShare wins Honorable Mention at Bio-IT World Best Practices Awards

Bio-IT World announced the winners of its Best Practices Awards competition yesterday at its annual meeting in Boston, MA. Out of the 34 projects evaluated this year, including those from industry giants GlaxoSmithKline, Amgen and Genentech, the Immune Tolerance Network’s (ITN) Clinical Trials Research Portal, TrialShare, received one of only two honorable mentions (see summary of the awards here). The Bio-IT World’s Best Practices Awards “recognize organizations for their outstanding innovations and excellence in the use of technologies and novel business strategies that will advance biomedical and translational research, drug development, and/or clinical trials.”

March 6, 2013

ITN Peanut Allergy Prevention Study Highlighted in the Wall Street Journal

A March 6, 2013 Wall Street Journal article, “Food Allergy Advice for Kids: Don’t Delay Peanuts, Eggs”, discusses the changing landscape surrounding food allergy prevention, citing the Immune Tolerance Network’s (ITN’s) LEAP study as a pivotal effort in determining whether the early introduction of allergenic foods may actually help prevent the development of allergies. The article points out that the increasing prevalence of food allergies in children in the US and other Western countries calls into question the guidelines from the American Academy of Pediatrics that recommend avoiding the introduction of certain allergenic foods (milk, eggs, peanuts, shellfish, tree nuts, and fish) before a certain age as a strategy to avoid future allergies.

February 19, 2013

New Publication: ITN’s Type 1 Diabetes Preclinical Consortium’s First Combination Therapy Study

Single-drug approaches to treat type 1 diabetes (T1D) have so far yielded only modest results: just a handful of biologics have been able to transiently delay pancreatic beta cell destruction. As such, creating long-term, sustained improvements in T1D may require multiple agents combined in strategic ways. Data from the first combination study from The Immune Tolerance Network (ITN) Type 1 Diabetes Preclinical Consortium was published last week in PLoS ONE alongside data from the La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology (LIAI) (see here).

January 24, 2013

Pilot Study Seeks to Understand Biomarkers in Cat Allergy Response

The Immune Tolerance Network (ITN) and Imperial College London are collaborating on a new pilot study examining immunological responses to cat allergen. Allergy to cat dander is one of the most common forms of allergic disease in the US and Europe, and can reduce the quality of life for allergy sufferers. The only form of disease-modifying therapy that does not just treat symptoms is immunotherapy, in which cat allergens are administered over a period of time to desensitize a patient. The goal of this pilot study is to measure time-dependent cellular patterns and immunological changes in response to cat allergen, and understand how these immunological markers correspond with clinical symptoms.

January 11, 2013

Public Launch of ITN TrialShare: The ITN’s New Clinical Trials Research Portal

The ITN is pleased to announce the public launch of ITN TrialShare, its new clinical trials research portal. This system represents a significant leap forward in data sharing and transparency, collaborative hypothesis generation and specimen sharing between the ITN and the broader scientific community.

December 4, 2012

HALT-MS Data to be presented at the American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting

Two-year follow-up data from the ITN’s HALT-MS study (High-Dose Immunosuppression and Autologous Transplantation for Multiple Sclerosis) led by Richard Nash, MD (Colorado Blood Cancer Institute) will be presented in an oral abstract at the American Society of Hematology (ASH) annual meeting on December 11th, 2012 in Atlanta, GA.  The goal of the HALT-MS study is to use autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) plus high-dose immunochemotherapy  in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis to regenerate the immune system in a non-autoreactive manner.