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Understanding the Immune System's Role in Tree Nut and Peanut Allergies: Key Biomarkers for Diagnosis and Treatment Monitoring and Treatment Targets (Markers4Care)

L

Luxembourg Institute of Health

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Food Allergy
Allergy;Food
Food Allergy in Children
Tree Nut Allergies
Food Allergy Peanut
Oral Immunotherapy for Food Allergy

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06554691
PRIDE 19/14254520 i2TRON (Other Grant/Funding Number)
PRIDE 16749720 NEXTIMMUNE2 (Other Grant/Funding Number)
230043_Markers4Care

Details and patient eligibility

About

Peanut and tree nuts belong to the main elicitors of pediatric food allergy and are the main cause of near fatal reactions in children requiring emergency management. Oral immunotherapy has emerged as an alternative treatment option for the management of food allergies, to enhance patients' safety and quality of life. Monitoring if the therapy is working relies on oral food challenges during the course of treatment. There is a clear need for reliable biomarkers that are reflective of the clinical progression during oral food challenges and during immunotherapy that would help with patient stratification and possibly for personalized treatment approaches in the future

The aim of this study is to measure immune parameters in the blood of nut-allergic participants during oral food challenges and during the course of oral immunotherapy.

The main questions the study aims to answer are:

  1. Identify immune markers that correlate with clinical reactivity
  2. Identify immune changes and markers that correlate with immunotherapy outcome

Researchers will compare these immune parameters between nut-allergic participants on oral immunotherapy and with nut-allergic participants on avoidance diet. Additionally, we will also compare the immune parameters of these nut-allergic participants with those healthy adults.

Full description

Background: The prevalence of peanut together with tree nut allergies have increase over the years and accounts for most of the life-threatening reactions even to minute doses of the allergen. Consequently, peanut and tree-nut allergies cause significant physical and mental burden to patients and their caretakers due to anxiety and fear of anaphylaxis from accidental exposures, stress from following a strict elimination diet, lack of proactive management plan and due to the low probability of natural recovery of such allergies. For decades, the management relied on a strict avoidance of the culprit foods. Oral immune therapy (OIT) is a ground breaking alternative modality to strict avoidance diets. OIT consist of gradual introduction of low doses of the implicated food allergen with the aim to modulate the patient's immune response and help build immunological and clinical tolerance. Though OIT has its strong advantages, the clinical outcome is variable among the patients. Therefore, there is a clear need for reliable ex-vivo biomarkers that are reflective of the clinical progression and therapy outcome that could aid with a more accurate patient stratification for personalized treatment approaches in the future.

Aims: This project aims at measuring immune targets, antibodies, immune cells and immune mediators, in patients' blood during oral food challenges (OFCs) and during the course of standard-of-care oral immunotherapy to identify new immune markers correlating to with the clinical outcome of the treatment. The identification of immune modifications during OIT will allow us to endotype patients and possibly aid in unraveling markers of food challenges and therapy progression as well as OIT outcome.

Luxembourg partners: The Luxembourg Institute of Health (LIH), Department of Infection and Immunity (DII; head Prof. M. Ollert) has the scientific project lead (Principal Investigator Dr. A. Kuehn). Main clinical partners are Dr. F. Codreanu-Morel and Dr. V. Petit-Cordebar from the National Unit of Immunology-Allergology, Centre Hospitalier (CHL), Luxembourg. Medical Principal Investigator for healthy controls is Dr. Alessia Pochesci, MD, Clinical and Epidemiological Investigation Center (CIEC), Luxembourg Institute of Health (LIH), Luxembourg. The Integrated Biobank of Luxembourg (IBBL) will prepare and store a subset of clinical samples until use. Other biological samples are prepared and stored at DII, LIH. Clinical samples (blood, sera, plasma,stool) will be analyzed at DII, LIH.

Project implementation: The clinicians at CHL will perform detailed clinical examinations of participants including skin prick test (SPT), serological analysis for specific IgE and food challenges to the implicated food allergen as per their routine clinical practice at the National Unit of Immunology-Allergology (CHL). Based on the European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (EAACI) guidelines and procedures established at CHL, all peanut- and tree-nut-allergic participants eligible for the study will undergo a baseline OFC. OFC is adapted from PRACTALL protocol and allergen doses are adjusted according to the clinical reactivity of the patient.

For participants eligible for immunotherapy (N= 30 Peanut-OIT and N=30 Tree nut-OIT), the OIT is based on the established protocol at the clinic and adapted from the current literature. Briefly, participant ingest incremental doses of the allergen (peanut/tree nut) at home until they reach a maintenance dose of 300 mg nut-protein in approximately 26 weeks (6 months). This initial phase of OIT is termed as the build-up phase. This is then followed by continued daily intake of this maintenance dose. After a minimum of 12 months of the maintenance phase of OIT, participants undergo another final OFC at the hospital to assess for desensitization to peanut or tree nut. Participants follow up at the hospital every 6 months i.e at end of the build-up phase, after 6 months and after 12 months of daily intake of maintenance dose.

Participants who are not eligible for OIT (N=30 peanut and tree-nut allergic) and who are on avoidance diet, are also followed up every 6 months for 18 months. However, final OFC will not be done for these participants.

The data collection of the study participants is carried out by the medical lead.

In addition, healthy adults (N=20) tolerating any type of nut and without any known food allergies will be recruited as controls. Dr. Alessia Pochesci, CIEC, LIH is responsible for the data collection from these healthy participants.

Blood sample collection:

i) For OIT group:

  • During the baseline and final OFC , blood samples will be collected at the beginning, during and at the end of the food challenge in three different vials.
  • During OIT follow-up, a one-time blood sample will be collected at the end of the build-up phase and after 6 months of maintenance phase in addition to the routine blood collection during these follow-up visits.

ii) For avoidance group:

  • During the baseline OFC , blood samples will be collected at the beginning, during and at the end of the food challenge.
  • During follow-up visits, one-time blood sampling will be taken six monthly i.e. at 6, 12 and 18 months after the baseline OFC.

iii) Healthy Adult participants: A one-time blood sampling will be done.

Stool sample collection:

Stool sample will be collected from nut-allergic participants at baseline and after the completion of a minimum of 18 months of the study duration using commercial at-home stool sampling kits. Participants receive a collection kit, containing special sampling tubes, accessories and instructions.

Collected clinical samples will be pseudonymized at the clinical centers. A synonym list containing the information on the identify of the participants recruited and their corresponding pseudonym, will be available at the clinical center only (medical investigators). Personal data is protected under the regulation (EU) 2016/679 of 27 April 2016 on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data (GDPR) and the law of 1 August 2018 on the organization of the National Data Protection Commission and the General Data Protection Act.

Enrollment

90 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

2 to 70 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

For Peanut and Tree nut Allergic participants

Inclusion criteria:

  • More than 2 years
  • Male or Female
  • Allergic to peanut (assessed by anamnesis, skin reactivity testing, sera testing for specific IgE)
  • Sign an Informed Consent

Exclusion criteria:

  • Pregnancy
  • Less than 2 years of age
  • Co-existing chronic medical condition such as cardiovascular disorders
  • Peanut or tree nut-allergic patients/families who are unwilling to undergo oral food challenges

The eligible participants will be assigned to the oral immunotherapy (OIT) group but if they are not eligible for OIT based on either on the reasons mentioned below, they will be assigned to the avoidance group.

Reasons for ineligibility of OIT :

  • risk of poor compliance with immunotherapy
  • lack of understanding of the OIT protocol
  • uncontrolled asthma
  • incompatibility with lifestyle (regular intense physical activities, multiple vacations)
  • unwilling to undergo OIT
  • long-term or frequent use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
  • multiple nut allergy with no direct clinical benefit of OIT to one nut
  • co-existing comorbidities such as active systemic autoimmune diseases, active malignancy, eosinophilic esophagitis.

For Healthy Controls

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Adults
  • Male or Female
  • Sign an Informed Consent
  • Tolerates any type of nut
  • No known food allergy

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Pregnancy
  • Co-existing chronic medical condition such as cardiovascular disorders

Trial design

90 participants in 2 patient groups

Oral Immunotherapy
Description:
Participants in this group undergo oral immunotherapy as part of their routine management of their nut allergies
Avoidance diet
Description:
Participants in this group are on strict avoidance diet as part of their nut allergy management

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Naphisabet Wanniang; Annette Kuehn

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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