Waldron-Lynch Frank, Kareclas Paula, Irons Kathryn, Walker Neil M, Mander Adrian, Wicker Linda S, Todd John A, Bond Simon
JDRF/Wellcome Trust Diabetes & Inflammation Laboratory, NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre, Cambridge Institute for Medical Research, University of Cambridge, Cambridge Biomedical Campus, Cambridge, UK.
Cambridge Clinical Trials Unit, Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge Biomedical Campus, Cambridge, UK.
BMJ Open. 2014 Jun 4;4(6):e005559. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005559.
CD4 T regulatory cells (Tregs) are crucial for the maintenance of self-tolerance and are deficient in many common autoimmune diseases such as type 1 diabetes (T1D). Interleukin 2 (IL-2) plays a major role in the activation and function of Tregs and treatment with ultra-low dose (ULD) IL-2 could increase Treg function to potentially halt disease progression in T1D. However, prior to embarking on large phase II/III clinical trials it is critical to develop new strategies for determining the mechanism of action of ULD IL-2 in participants with T1D. In this mechanistic study we will combine a novel trial design with a clinical grade Treg assay to identify the best doses of ULD IL-2 to induce targeted increases in Tregs.
Adaptive study of IL-2 dose on regulatory T cells in type 1 diabetes (DILT1D) is a single centre non-randomised, single dose, open label, adaptive dose-finding trial. The primary objective of DILT1D is to identify the best doses of IL-2 to achieve a minimal or maximal Treg increase in participants with T1D (N=40). The design has an initial learning phase where pairs of participants are assigned to five preassigned doses followed by an interim analysis to determine the two Treg targets for the reminder of the trial. This will then be followed by an adaptive phase which is fully sequential with an interim analysis after each participant is observed to determine the choice of dose based on the optimality criterion to minimise the determinant of covariance of the estimated target doses. A dose determining committee will review all data available at the interim(s) and then provide decisions regarding the choice of dose to administer to subsequent participants.
Ethical approval for the study was granted on 18 February 2013.
The results of this study will be reported through peer-reviewed journals, conference presentations and an internal organisational report.
NCT01827735, ISRCTN27852285, DRN767.
CD4调节性T细胞(Tregs)对于维持自身耐受性至关重要,并且在许多常见的自身免疫性疾病(如1型糖尿病(T1D))中存在缺陷。白细胞介素2(IL-2)在Tregs的激活和功能中起主要作用,超低剂量(ULD)IL-2治疗可增强Treg功能,从而有可能阻止T1D的疾病进展。然而,在开展大型II/III期临床试验之前,制定新策略以确定ULD IL-2在T1D患者中的作用机制至关重要。在这项机制研究中,我们将结合新颖的试验设计与临床级Treg检测方法,以确定能诱导Tregs靶向性增加的最佳ULD IL-2剂量。
1型糖尿病中IL-2剂量对调节性T细胞的适应性研究(DILT1D)是一项单中心、非随机、单剂量、开放标签的适应性剂量探索试验。DILT1D的主要目标是确定能使T1D患者(N = 40)的Tregs实现最小或最大增加的最佳IL-2剂量。该设计有一个初始学习阶段,将参与者配对分配到五个预先设定的剂量,随后进行中期分析,以确定试验剩余阶段的两个Treg目标。接着是适应性阶段,该阶段完全按顺序进行,在观察完每个参与者后进行中期分析,根据最优标准确定剂量选择,以最小化估计目标剂量协方差的行列式。剂量确定委员会将审查中期可获得的所有数据,然后就给予后续参与者的剂量选择提供决策。
该研究于2013年2月18日获得伦理批准。
本研究结果将通过同行评审期刊、会议报告和内部组织报告进行汇报。
NCT01827735、ISRCTN27852285、DRN767。