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Design of TOLERANT: phase I/II safety assessment of intranodal administration of HSP70/mB29a self-peptide antigen-loaded autologous tolerogenic dendritic cells in patients with rheumatoid arthritis

Authors :
Jacob M van Laar
Anna de Goede
Gerty Schreibelt
Arie Jan Stoppelenburg
I Jolanda M de Vries
Paco Welsing
Bouke Koeneman
Evert-Jan Breman
Laureen Lammers
Tjitske Duiveman-de Boer
Willem van Eden
Paul Leufkens
Femke Broere
Source :
BMJ Open, Vol 14, Iss 9 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2024.

Abstract

Introduction In rheumatoid arthritis (RA), immunosuppressive therapies may achieve symptomatic relief, but do not induce long-term, drug-free remission. Meanwhile, the lifelong use of immunosuppressive drugs confers increased risk for malignancy and infections. As such, there is an unmet need for novel treatments that selectively target the pathogenic immune response in RA by inducing tolerance to autoantigens. Autologous cell therapy using antigen-loaded tolerogenic dendritic cells (tolDCs) aims to reinstate autoantigen-specific immunological tolerance in RA and could potentially meet this need.Methods and analysis We report here the design of the phase I/II, investigator-initiated, open-label, dose-escalation trial TOLERANT. In this study, we will evaluate the intranodal administration of tolDCs in patients with RA that are in remission under immunosuppressive therapy. The tolDCs in this trial are loaded with the heat shock protein 70-derived peptide mB29a, which is an effective surrogate autoantigen in animal models of arthritis. Within this study, three dose-escalation cohorts (two intranodal injections of 5×106, 10×106 and 15×106 tolDCs), each consisting of three patients, are evaluated to identify the highest safe dose (recommended dose), and an extension cohort of nine patients will be treated with the recommended dose. The (co-)primary endpoints of this study are safety and feasibility, which we assess by the number of AEs and the successful production of tolDCs. The secondary endpoints include the immunological effects of the treatment, which we assess with a variety of high-dimensional and antigen-specific immunological assays. Clinical effects are exploratory outcomes.Ethics and dissemination Ethical approval for this study has been obtained from the Netherlands Central Committee on Research Involving Human Subjects. The outcomes of the trial will be disseminated through publications in open-access, peer-reviewed scientific journals, scientific conferences and to patient associations.Trial registration numbers NCT05251870; 2019-003620-20 (EudraCT); NL71296.000.20 (CCMO register).

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
14
Issue :
9
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMJ Open
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.048d163ecbc2444592ca57a8e33b4efc
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-078231