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About
IL-2 is an inducer of regulatory T cells (Treg), a population of lymphocytes that fail to control the autoimmune destruction of beta-cells in patients with Type 1 Diabetes (T1D). The investigators recently showed that low dose IL-2 is well tolerated in patients with an autoimmune disease. The investigators aim to use IL-2 to induce/stimulate Treg in T1D patients. This study will investigate the dose effect relationship of low dose IL-2 for Treg induction such as to optimize the risk benefit ratio for this treatment in T1D. By Treg induction, the investigators aim to protect the remaining/regenerating β-cells from autoimmune destruction, thus improving or even curing T1D.
Full description
Rationale:
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) results from an autoimmune destruction of beta-pancreatic cells that regulatory T cells (Treg) fail to control. This is in part due to a deficit in production of, or response to, interleukin 2 (IL-2). This cytokine is essential to Treg development, survival and function. Importantly, while IL-2 also contributes to the activation of effector T cells (Teff), IL-2/IL-2 receptor signal transduction threshold is much lower for Treg than Teff. Thus low-dose IL-2 could be a specific Treg inducer/stimulator.
The investigators then recently showed that low-dose IL-2 could cure recent onset diabetes in NOD mice that develop spontaneous diabetes considered as the best model of human T1D. A 5-day treatment with IL-2 could cure over 30% of the mice versus 0% for controls.
With these premises, the investigators propose to explore if Treg induction could be obtained in patients who may have a deficit in production of, or response to, IL-2. Defining the dose effect relationship of low dose IL-2 for Treg induction will optimize the risk benefit ratio for IL-2 in T1D.
Principal objective:
To define the dose-effect relationship of low dose IL-2 for Treg induction in patient with recent onset diabetes
Evaluation Criteria:
Study plan:
After inclusion (Day0), the patient receives a 5-day course of IL-2 or placebo. Patients are randomized in 4 arms receiving either a placebo, or IL-2 doses of 0,33 - 1 or 3 millions UI/day. Laboratory follow-up of peripheral blood T cell subsets will be performed at D0 to D6 (daily), D15, D22 and D60 by immunophenotyping and transcriptomics.
Tolerance will be evaluated at D0-6, D15, D22 and D60.
Methodology:
Double blind placebo controlled randomized study, with 4 parallel groups. Patients will have T1D of autoimmune origin attested by the presence of auto-antibodies (at least one of: anti-islet, anti-GAD, anti-IA2 or anti-ZnT8), with a diagnostic inferior or equal to 24 months.
Study length:
Study length = 9 months Patient participation = 2 months Inclusion period = 6 months
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25 participants in 4 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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