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The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of intralymphatic immunotherapy (ILIT) with ALUTARD SQ Felis domesticus in patients with cat allergy-induced allergic rhinitis and asthma. The main questions it aims to answer are:
Is ILIT with ALUTARD SQ Felis domesticus safe and well tolerated?
What immunological responses play a role in ILIT?
Researchers will compare the effects of ILIT to existing subcutaneous immunotherapy (SCIT) approaches to assess safety, tolerability, immunogenicity, and efficacy.
Participants will:
Receive 3-4 ILIT injections of ALUTARD SQ Felis domesticus into an inguinal lymph node, guided by ultrasound.
Undergo safety monitoring, including WAO guidelines for systemic allergic reactions and tryptase measurement.
Complete lung function tests, questionnaires, and a modified nasal provocation test to evaluate asthma effects and treatment efficacy.
Provide blood samples for ImmunoCAP and basophil activation testing using CAST ELISA.
Inclusion criteria: Adults aged 18-65 with cat-dander-induced allergic rhinitis and asthma.
Exclusion criteria: Hypersensitivity to treatment components, systemic steroid use, uncontrolled asthma (FEV1 < 70%), recent severe asthma exacerbations, or serious comorbidities.
The study aims to generate data to inform future efficacy trials.
Full description
Patients with allergic rhinitis and asthma due to sensitisation to cat allergens are seldom offered allergen immunotherapy (AIT) due to risk of systemic allergic adverse events such as asthma exacerbations and anaphylaxis. In Switzerland, ALUTARD SQ Felis domesticus is approved for subcutaneous immunotherapy (SCIT). The treatment comprises nearly 50 injections over 3 years. In contrast, intralymphatic immunotherapy (ILIT) is an experimental treatment option that has been suggested to be effective after only 3-4 injections using much lower doses as for SCIT. Since the lymph nodes do not contains mast cells, and due to the lower doses and less injections, ILIT is expected to be a safer alternative to SCIT. This study in patient with cat allergy therefore tests the safety and tolerability of ALUTARD SQ Felis domesticus in ILIT.
The objective is to test if ILIT is safe and tolerable in patients with allergy to cat hair allergen and to determine which immunological responses play a role in ILIT.
The main outcome measures on the safety, tolerability, immunogenicity and efficacy. The data will be used to design later efficacy studies.
Safety is measured using a World Allergy Organization (WAO) guideline for systemic allergic reactions and by tryptase measurement in blood serum. Effects on asthma is measured using lung functions tests and questionnaires. Immunogenicity is measured by ImmunoCAP and basophil activation is measured using CAST ELISA. Treatment effect is measured using a modified nasal provocation test and quality of life questionnaires.
Inclusion: Informed consent, cat-dander-induced ARC, age 18-65 years, any sex and gender.
Exclusion: Hypersensitivity to aluminium hydroxide or phenol. Systemic steroid treatment. Uncontrolled asthma or FEV1 < 70%. Severe asthma exacerbation last 3 months. Emphysema, bronchiectasis. Serious comorbidities as judged by the recruiting physician.
The study drug is administered by injection into an inguinal lymph node. The targeting of the lymph node is supported by simultaneous sonography.
"ALUTARD SQ Felis domesticus" is administered intralymphatically. The injection volume is 50-200 mcl and the dose is between 10 SQ units and 10,000 SQ units. The injections will be performed three to four times with 4 weeks or more interval between each injection.
The procedures last for 5-10 minutes, but various tests and are performed prior to and after the ILIT injection. The visits therefore last for 2-3 hours, including the safety follow up.
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36 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Pål Johansen, Professor, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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