Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02194530

Reduction of Peanut Reactivity and Immune Modulation With Anti-IgE Therapy

Pilot Study to Collect Blood From Research Subjects Allergic and Non-allergic to Peanut to Study Immune Modulation With Anti-IgE Therapy in Mice

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
11 (actual)
Sponsor
Weill Medical College of Cornell University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This pilot study is will examine the pathways involved in allergic response, primarily in food allergy; specifically peanut allergy. We will also study non-allergic donors as well as patients with atopic disorders, primarily as control subjects. We believe that this study will lead to discovery of significant pathways involved in the allergic pathway that can be explored in more detail during follow-up studies in order to address mechanistic questions that cannot be answered in a pilot trial. We believe that such a pilot study represents the ideal approach to identify effective therapeutic interventions and to simultaneously better understand the underlying mechanistic properties involved in the allergy cascade. We think that this study forms the basis for a novel avenue of research into the pathogenesis of allergic pathways, a disease that is still associated with significant morbidity and mortality.

Detailed description

The study aims to characterize the pathways involved in the allergic response, primarily in food allergy; specifically peanut allergy. We will also study non-allergic donors as well as patients with atopic disorders, primarily as control subjects. All eligible study participants will have documented elevated total IgE levels, peanut positivity or another antigen/allergen specific elevated IgE (ie common indoor/outdoor allergens) prior to being enrolled in the study. Our study will focus on allergic as well as non-allergic individuals. We plan on collecting samples from a total of 60 patients during one time point (peanut allergic individuals, non-atopic/allergic individuals, atopic individuals-other than peanut allergy). We believe that such a pilot study represents the ideal approach to identify effective therapeutic interventions and to simultaneously better understand the underlying mechanistic properties involved in the allergy cascade. We plan to obtain a detailed history prior to enrollment as well as objective data (ie SPT as well as Immunocap testing results). There will be 3 study groups and studies will be performed on approximately 20 peanut allergic patients, 20 non-allergic controls, and 20 allergic/atopic (non-peanut allergic, but allergic to indoor/outdoor allergen) individuals. There will be one blood draw required at each visit (weeks 0, 4, 8). Each blood draw will require 105 ml of whole blood to be collected in ten heparinized 10-mL tubes and one EDTA tube. We plan to assess the levels of total IgE and IgG as well as antigen specific IgG and IgE in the peripheral blood of patients. We will specifically perform ELISA testing that detects these levels. We will also perform in vitro CD4+ T cell proliferation assays. For this purpose, patients' peripheral T cells will be isolated with a combination of magnetic beads and flow cytometric sorting.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2015-03-30
Primary completion
2016-07-19
Completion
2016-07-19
First posted
2014-07-18
Last updated
2023-12-06

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02194530. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.