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Mast Cell Activation Test in Allergic Disease

H

HKSH Medical Group

Status

Completed

Conditions

Food Allergy
Asthma
Mastocytosis
Eczema
Mast Cell Activation Syndrome
Chronic Idiopathic Urticaria
Anaphylaxis

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT03406325
REC-2017-17

Details and patient eligibility

About

Activation of mast cells in the immune system is known to cause allergic reactions sometimes with severe systemic symptoms. The investigators have recently developed a blood-based mast cell activation diagnostic test in which levels of functional activation in-vitro in primary cultured mast cells generated from the peripheral blood of single individuals can be assessed. It is the hypothesis that the test can be used to predict the potential state of in-vivo mast cell activation in any individual based on the functional activation profiles exhibited by their cultured mast cells. The investigators now wish to translate their in-vitro findings in a pilot study to disease groups where mast cell activation is expected to be high. These include highly allergic individuals; those with chronic idiopathic urticaria; those with mastocytosis; and those with the mast cell activation syndrome. Furthermore, they will use the functional genomics approach to identify gene expression biomarkers that are correlated with such diseases. The results will be compared with data that have been collected from a cohort of healthy control blood donors.

Full description

The objective of this study is to assess whether patients with severe allergic diseases exhibit high levels of mast cell activation as determined by the mast cell activation diagnostic test the investigators have developed. They anticipate that patients with history of severe allergic reactions will show up as high responders in the blood-based mast cell activation diagnostic test. Moreover, using microarray analysis as the approach for gene expression studies, they anticipate further that genomics biomarkers that are correlated with the high functional activation of the in-vitro mast cells derived from these patients can be readily identified.

About 100 ml of peripheral venous blood from individual patients will be drawn into heparinized syringes and collected in a blood-collecting bag/tube containing silica. The bag/tube will be promptly processed for the generation of primary human mast cell cultures using the protocol that has previously been developed [Inflammation Research 66: 25 (2017). After culturing for 9 weeks, the resulting human mast cells will be analyzed for both their functional activity in terms of histamine release in response to the activation of high-affinity Immunoglobulin E (IgE) receptors in these cells and their gene expression profiles using microarray analysis. The in-vitro functional and genomics data will be correlated with specific diagnoses and measurements of blood prostaglandin D2 (PGD2), PGD2 metabolites, tryptase and histamine levels in blood. For mediator assays, plasma from each subject will be collected after the cluster of differentiation 34 positive (CD34+) isolation step and the samples will be aliquoted and frozen at -80 degrees centigrade for subsequent analysis.

Enrollment

19 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Any patients with the above diagnoses -

Exclusion criteria

Children < 18 years old; those who are unwilling or unable to donate blood; pregnant mothers.

Trial design

19 participants in 7 patient groups

urticaria
Description:
Patients with this condition
asthma
Description:
Patients with this condition
eczema
Description:
Patients with this condition
food allergy
Description:
Patients with this condition
anaphylaxis
Description:
Patients with this condition
mastocytosis
Description:
Patients with this condition
mast cell activating syndrome
Description:
Patients with this condition

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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