Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
This is a phase IIb clinical trial to investigate the efficacy and safety of subcutaneous immunotherapy with a modified parvalbumin called mCyp c 1 for the treatment of fish allergy to subjects allergic to fish.
Full description
Fish allergy is a persistent food allergy (usually lifelong) which can be life threatening due to the danger for anaphylaxis (severe allergic reaction) upon accidental exposure to fish. Until today there is no curative treatment for fish allergy. The only treatment is avoidance. Patients with fish allergy have to avoid fish of all types and carry an adrenaline autoinjector and rescue medication, in case of accidental exposure to fish. That way patients with fish allergy have to continuously control what they are eating and this causes a great deal of stress and impacts their quality of life.
The major allergen responsible for fish allergy is the protein parvalbumin. It is recognized by the vast majority (96-100%) of fish allergic patients.
During the past, treatment of food allergy with immunotherapy was successful but dangerous, due to serious side effects (anaphylaxis).
A novel biotechnological product, a recombinant hypoallergenic parvalbumin, called mCyp c 1, is used for the first time in a phase IIb clinical trial, to test the efficacy of subcutaneous immunotherapy for the treatment of fish allergy. The investigational medicinal product mCyp c1, is based on the recombinant wild type carp parvalbumin (rCyp c 1) and is the result of site directed mutagenesis, by which the disruption of the two calcium binding sites of carp parvalbumin is performed. The modified parvalbumin mCyp c 1, is both hypoallergenic and immunogenic. That way it is a promising molecule for the safe and effective treatment of fish allergy.
This molecule has proven to be safe in a phase I/IIa study that has been performed, during which mCyp c 1 was administered with subcutaneous injections. During this study only local reactions at the injection site were observed. There were no observed systemic reactions. Even more, there were clear indications that mCyp c 1 was recognized by the immune system. The results of this phase I/IIa study guarantee the necessity of a phase IIb clinical trial with mCyp c 1, in order to study the efficacy of this modified parvalbumin in the treatment of fish allergy.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Subject having given a written informed consent before completing any study related procedure.
Male or female subject from 18 to 65 years old and in general good health as determined by past medical history and physical examination.
For woman of child bearing potential:
Convincing case history of allergy (immediate allergic reaction ≤ 2 hours) to fish ingestion.
Specific IgE to fish by both a positive (3mm mean wheal diameter over negative control) SPT to cod extract and an ImmunoCAP ≥ class 2 (0.70 kUA/L) for cod (f3) and rCyp c 1 at screening.
Positive DBPCFC with cod at screening visits.
FEV1 ≥ 80% of predicted values at screening.
Subject accepting to comply fully with the protocol.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
45 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal