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About
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is caused by the destruction of insulin-producing cells by effector T cells (Teffs), due to a deficiency of regulatory T cells (Tregs).
Ciclosporin effectively blocks the Teffs and controls diabetes, but cannot be considered as a long-term treatment. Low-dose interleukin-2 (ld IL-2) activates and expands Tregs in humans.
Hence, Ld IL-2 in patients in whom the autoimmune process was blocked early by a short treatment (2 months) of cyclosporine should restore immune homeostasis and maintain some insulin production over the long term.
Full description
Primary Objective :
Tregs' response profile, after 4 administrations of 1MIU/day of IL-2 (Day 63-66) in patients with recently diagnosed type 1 diabetes who have been treated with ciclosporin for 2 months.
Primary assessment criterion:
Change in Tregs values at D67 compared to D63 (post-ciclosporin values)
Secondary objectives and secondary assessment criteria:
Change in residual insulin secretion
Change in Tregs values at Month 3 (Day 88), Month 6 (Day 179), Month 9 (Day 270), Month 12 (Day 361) and after treatment discontinuation at Month 18 (Day 536) and Month 24 (Day 719) compared to baseline and post-ciclosporin values (Day 63)
Ciclosporin and ILT-101/placebo compliance
Tolerance
Experimental design:
This is a monocentric, randomized, placebo controlled, double-blind trial in parallel-groups, evaluating a treatment by cyclosporine 7mg/kg/day during 2 months followed by ILT-101/placebo, 1 MIU daily for 5 days and 1 MIU every week, during 10 months.
Population involved:
Male or female, aged between 16 and 35 years, with recent diagnosis of type 1 diabetes (< 3 months).
Number of subjects: 24 Inclusion period: 12 months Duration of patient participation: 24 months (treatment period: 12 months, follow-up period: 12months) Total duration of the study: 37 months
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
• Age at inclusion between ≥ 16 years old (Tanner 5 pubertal stage) and ≤ 45 years old
If the patient is a minor, the signatures of both parents and of the child will be collected (or the legal representative if only one parent is alive).
Exclusion criteria
Known contraindications to IL2 treatment:
Known contraindications to treatment with cyclosporine
Presence of unauthorized treatment, i.e. cytotoxic drugs, products known for their impact on blood glucose levels or for their interactions with the treatments under trial
Patients who have received anti-diabetic treatment other than insulin for more than 3 consecutive months.
Anti-thyroperoxidase positive and abnormal TSH and T4 at inclusion
Anti-transglutaminase positive at inclusion
EBV viral load > 2000 IU/ml
CMV viral load > 400 IU/ml
HBV, HCV or HIV infection
Lymphopenia ≤ 1000/ mm3
Presence or history of cancer that has been cured for less than five years, except in situ cervical or basal cell carcinoma in early stage management,
Participation in other intervention research involving humans < 3 months,
Pregnant or breastfeeding women
Lack of social security affiliation (as a beneficiary or assignee)
Vaccination with live attenuated virus during the last 4 weeks before the start of the experimental treatment and during the entire treatment phase.
Patient with active SARS-CoV-2 infection
Patient with chronic respiratory disease
Subject under legal protection (such as tutorship, curatorship, or judicial safeguard)
Subject hospitalized without consent, unable to express consent or deprived of liberty
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
24 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Roberta Lorenzon, MD; David Klatzmann, MD, Ph.D
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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