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About
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) results from an autoimmune destruction of the insulin-producing beta cells within the pancreatic islets of Langerhans. This process is identified by circulating islet autoantibodies to beta cell antigens, and is mediated by a lack of immunological self-tolerance. Self-tolerance is achieved by T cell exposure to antigen in the thymus or periphery in a manner that deletes autoreactive effector T cells or induces regulatory T cells. Immunological tolerance can be achieved by administration of antigen under appropriate conditions. Administration of oral insulin in islet autoantibody-negative children who are genetically predisposed for T1D offers the potential for inducing immunological tolerance to beta cells and thereby protect against the development of islet autoimmunity and T1D.
Full description
The purpose of the Pre-POINT-Early Study is to investigate and consolidate the finding from the preceding Pre-POINT Study, namely safety and immune efficacy at a daily dose of 67.5 mg oral insulin. Since younger children will be tested in Pre-POINT-Early, the 67.5 mg dose will be reached by dose escalation starting at 7.5 mg for 3 months followed by exposure to 22.5 mg for 3 months, and reaching the desired 67.5 mg dose, which is administered for 6 months in 22 children.
The active substance for oral application is human insulin, synthesized in a special non-disease-producing laboratory strain of Escherichia coli bacteria that has been genetically altered by the addition of the gene for human insulin production (Lilly Pharmaceuticals, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA). The physical, chemical and pharmaceutical properties of the human insulin have been well documented by the manufacturer. Oral Insulin will be applied as a capsule containing 7.5; 22.5 and 67.5 mg of the active substance together with filling substance cellulose. After oral administration insulin will be rapidly degraded by gastric acids. Enteric delivery and systemic availability is therefore unlikely and efficacy of active insulin is likely to be restricted to the oral mucosa.
In human studies oral insulin administration was safe and without adverse side effects at doses between 2.5 and 7.5 mg per day. Additionally Bonifacio et al. have conducted and completed the Pre-POINT study, the first primary autoantigen vaccination dose-finding study in which children with high genetic risk for type 1 diabetes were administered insulin orally daily. Oral insulin at all tested doses (2.5 mg; 7.5 mg; 22.5 mg and 67.5 mg) in Pre-POINT was considered safe: None of the children who received study drug or placebo experienced hypoglycaemic episodes after administration of medication, and no allergic reactions were observed.
The Pre-POINT-Early intended doses for oral application are 7.5, 22.5 and 67.5 mg per day. The aim of the study is to determine whether daily administration of oral insulin starting with dose 7.5 mg (3 months), moving to dose 22.5 mg (3 months) and to the highest dose of 67.5 mg (6 months) insulin to young children aged 6 months to 2 years with high genetic risk for T1DM induces immune responses to insulin and/or proinsulin with features of immune regulation.
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Inclusion criteria
Children aged 6 months to 2 years who have a first degree relative with type 1 diabetes, and have a HLA genotype that includes a HLA DR4-DQB1*0302 or HLA DR4-DQB1*0304 haplotype, and does not include one of the following alleles or haplotypes: DR 11, DR 12, DQB1*0602, DR7-DQB1*0303, DR14-DQB1*0503
and must be
Islet autoantibody negative at time of recruitment.
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44 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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