Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT06935890

Jack Jumper Ant Venom Immunotherapy Long-term Effectiveness Investigation

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
100 (estimated)
Sponsor
Murdoch Childrens Research Institute · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Jack Jumper ant (JJA) venom allergy is a uniquely Australian medical condition. It is the leading cause of venom allergy and affects up to three per cent of the population. 70 percent of people with JJA allergy will have another reaction on a repeat sting and this sensitivity appears to persist for many years. Venom immunotherapy (VIT) has been shown to be a safe and effective treatment in the prevention of severe systemic allergic reactions (anaphylaxis) to future stings. It is currently offered to patients as standard care in Tasmania, South Australia and Victoria. However, whilst JJA VIT has been used for many years, there is a lack of evidence on the long-term benefit of the treatment and how it impacts patient quality of life. This trial will offer patients who have completed a JJA VIT program (between 3 and \< 6-years duration) and have been off-treatment for at least 18-months and \< 5 years, to have a supervised JJA sting challenge and blood test to assess their JJA venom tolerance level. It will also ask them to complete a set of questionnaires at different timepoints to obtain a history of their exposure and reactions to JJA stings outside of the hospital setting (field stings), and to measure the impact of the completed VIT and knowledge of their sting challenge outcome on their quality of life and their behaviours around auto-injectors. These measures will be used to explore the long-term effectiveness of JJA VIT and the impact of a sting challenge post VIT on a patient's quality of life.

Detailed description

This will be a prospective, multicentre, phase 4 clinical trial examining the long-term effectiveness (measured by response to an in-hospital JJA sting challenge, primary outcome) and impact on quality of life of JJA VIT involving 3 Australian tertiary hospital sites offering this treatment - Royal Hobart Hospital, Royal Adelaide Hospital and Monash Medical Centre. Patients who have completed their JJA VIT (between 3 and \<6 years duration) at one of the 3 sites and off-treatment for at least 18 months and \< 5 years, will be invited to participate in the trial by their original treating site. A research team member will obtain informed e-consent and a booking for an in-clinic JJA sting challenge will be allocated. For all consented participants, quality of life (QoL), anxiety and depression scores, history of field sting reactions since treatment completion and attitudes toward adrenaline autoinjector carriage/usage will be collected via questionnaire at trial enrolment, sting challenge, 1-month post sting challenge and annually for 3-years. A blood sample will be collected immediately prior to the sting challenge at the in-clinic appointment. Participants will also be asked to consent to access retrospective data related to their completed JJA VIT course from their hospital clinical records. Optional consents will also be sought from each participant for the collection of an extra tube of blood with the serum biobanked for future analysis, and the inclusion of their data in the National Allergy BioRepository (ALBI).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERJack Jumper Ant Venom ImmunotherapyJack Jumper Ant Venom Immunotherapy involves injections, under the skin, of gradually increasing doses of insect venom. The treatment is usually between 3-\<6 years duration. Participants will have completed this treatment at least 18 months prior to their enrolment in this trial.

Timeline

Start date
2025-11-25
Primary completion
2029-10-01
Completion
2029-10-01
First posted
2025-04-20
Last updated
2026-03-31

Locations

3 sites across 1 country: Australia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06935890. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.