September 23, 2013
New Publication: Results from the T1DAL Type 1 Diabetes StudyEncouraging results from the T1DAL study (Targeting effector memory T cells with alefacept in new onset type 1 diabetes), led by Dr. Mark Rigby (Indiana University) are published today in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology.
September 10, 2013
ITN Mourns the Passing of Lloyd MayerIt is with great sadness that we report the passing of Lloyd Mayer, MD. As a small part of his being a fantastic colleague to all of us, Lloyd had been an active member of the Network Steering Committee since 2006 and the Protocol Chair for ITN047AI TAKE (“A study to determine The immunogenicity And oral tolerance to Keyhole limpet hemocyanin”). Lloyd was also Professor and Co-Director of the Immunology Institute, the Dorothy and David Merksamer Professor of Medicine and Professor of Microbiology at the Mount Sinai Medical Center.
August 28, 2013
New Publication: START Type 1 Diabetes Study Showed No Difference in Insulin Production DeclineResults from the START clinical study (Study of Thymoglobulin to Arrest Newly Diagnosed Type 1 Diabetes), led by Dr. Steve Gitelman (University of California, San Francisco) with the Immune Tolerance Network (ITN), were published in an article today in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology. The study enrolled 58 new-onset type 1 diabetic subjects ages 12-35. The subjects were randomized 2:1 to antithymocyte globulin (ATG) treatment, which is currently licensed for the treatment of organ transplant rejection, or placebo. Patients in the ATG group received intravenous infusion over 4 consecutive days at the start of the study and were given mixed meal tolerance tests at 6 month intervals to measure insulin production throughout the study. The study was the first fully powered, placebo-controlled, multi-center study of ATG therapy in patients with new-onset type 1 diabetes.
August 7, 2013
ITN TrialShare Sees Public Usage Rise Following Publication of the First Manuscript with Embedded Links to the SystemIn an article reporting the 18-month results of the Immune Tolerance Network’s (ITN) RAVE clinical trial, published August 1st in the New England Journal of Medicine, the ITN is providing unfettered access to the underlying clinical data and analysis code via the new clinical trials research portal, ITN TrialShare (itntrialshare.org). Since then public usage of the system (not including ITN staff and collaborators) has increased dramatically with over 100 new users registering and 3000 total page hits by public users. While the RAVE study accounts for about one third of the study specific page hits, visits to other public studies have increased as well. ITN looks forward to continued expansion of data sharing through TrialShare and welcomes feedback from all of our users (trialsharesupport@immunetolerance.org).
August 1, 2013
ITN Achieves Scientific Manuscript First - Provides Open, Interactive Access to Clinical Trial Data with New Publication: Rituximab Therapy Effective for ANCA-associated VasculitisIn an article reporting the 18-month results of the Immune Tolerance Network’s (ITN) RAVE clinical trial, published August 1st in the New England Journal of Medicine, the ITN is providing unfettered access to the underlying clinical data and analysis code via the new clinical trials research portal, ITN TrialShare (itntrialshare.org). The data published today come from the ITN’s RAVE study led by John Stone, MD (Massachusetts General Hospital) and Ulrich Specks, MD (Mayo Clinic). The researchers demonstrated that a single course of rituximab therapy (anti-CD20; Rituxan, Genentech, Inc.) is as effective as the current standard of care regimen of drugs for remission induction and maintenance in patients with ANCA-associated Vasculitis (AAV). Rituximab has a shorter and simpler treatment course compared to standard therapy (cyclophosphamide), as well as an improved safety profile, thus offering significant treatment advancement for patients with AAV. This publication is the first to provide public access to the raw study data via direct links from the publication and its figures to the data sets in TrialShare. The accompanying editorial in NEJM highlights the utility of TrialShare in data sharing and transparency.
July 24, 2013
IMPACT Study Launches Today: Peanut Oral Immunotherapy in Young ChildrenThe Immune Tolerance Network’s (ITN’s) IMPACT Study, “Oral Immunotherapy for Induction of Tolerance and Desensitization in Peanut-Allergic Children,” opened for enrollment today. This will be the first major study to examine whether oral immunotherapy can lead to durable, lasting tolerance to peanut among young peanut-allergic children. This study will be led by ITN investigator Wesley Burks, MD, Chair of the Department of Pediatrics at UNC Chapel Hill. Patients will be enrolled at UNC as well as at additional sites around the country including the University of Arkansas, Stanford University, Johns Hopkins Children’s Hospital and Mount Sinai Hospital.
July 8, 2013
New Publication: AbATE Type 1 Diabetes Study Reveals Subset of Patients with Strong Response to TherapyPrimary results from the Immune Tolerance Network’s AbATE study (Autoimmunity-Blocking Antibody for Tolerance in Recently Diagnosed Type 1 Diabetes) were published online today in Diabetes. The Phase II AbATE study, led by Kevan Herold, MD (Yale University), tested two doses of anti-CD3 given one year apart in new onset type 1 diabetics compared to control. After 2 years, the anti-CD3-treated group showed significantly greater preservation of C-peptide compared to the control group (75% higher responses compared to control), meeting the study’s primary endpoint.
June 25, 2013
Prophylactic use of Sublingual Allergen Immunotherapy in High-Risk ChildrenIn a letter published recently in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, Immune Tolerance Network (ITN) investigators describe the experience of the ITN’s GPAC study (Immunoprophylaxis of Allergic Disease) that aimed to test whether early intervention with a form of oral immunotherapy in at-risk young children could prevent the development of asthma. Evidence suggests that environmental exposure to allergens early on in life via inhalation and mucosal exposure can induce regulatory (vs. inflammatory) responses towards those allergens. The aim of this study was to test the ability of a sublingual allergen mixture (compared to placebo) to enhance mucosal exposure to certain aeroallergens in very young children at high risk for allergy, possibly arresting the development of inflammatory responses and preventing the onset of allergic disease.
June 18, 2013
ITN Type 1 Diabetes Data to be featured at the American Diabetes Association (ADA) Scientific SessionsData from three ITN type 1 diabetes trials will be featured during the “Clinical Trials of T Cell Therapeutics for Reversing Type 1 Diabetes” session at the Annual American Diabetes Association (ADA) Scientific Sessions in Chicago, IL. This session will take place on June 22 from 8:00am-10:00am CT.
June 14, 2013
New Publication: Clinical Outcomes of Remission Induction Therapy for Severe ANCA-Associated VasculitisIn a manuscript published this week in Arthritis & Rheumatism, Immune Tolerance Network (ITN) investigators sought to better understand the distinction between patients who did and did not achieve the primary endpoint in the RAVE Study (Rituximab for the Treatment of ANCA-Associated Vasculitis and Microscopic Polyangiitis). The RAVE study established rituximab (Rituxan®; Genentech), a B-cell depletor, as a treatment alternative to cyclophosphamide (standard of care) for remission induction in patients with ANCA-Associated Vasculitis (AAV), a severe autoimmune disease marked by certain type of antibody (ANCA) that targets the blood vessels. Although outcomes for patients with AAV have improved over the past decades, about a quarter of patients fail standard induction regimens due to persistent or recurrent disease. The current study sought to better understand characteristics that predicted outcomes at 6 months.