Phase 1 trial will include 16 patients ages 60 to 85 years who have early, symptomatic Alzheimer disease but are otherwise in good health
THURSDAY, Nov. 18, 2021 (HealthDay News) — The first human clinical trial of a nasal vaccine to slow the progression of Alzheimer disease is set to begin after nearly 20 years of research.
This is a “remarkable milestone,” according to Howard Weiner, M.D., codirector of the Ann Romney Center for Neurologic Diseases at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. “Over the last two decades, we’ve amassed preclinical evidence suggesting the potential of this nasal vaccine for Alzheimer disease,” Weiner said in a hospital news release. “If clinical trials in humans show that the vaccine is safe and effective, this could represent a nontoxic treatment for people with Alzheimer’s, and it could also be given early to help prevent Alzheimer’s in people at risk.”
The vaccine features an experimental agent called Protollin that stimulates the immune system. It is designed to prompt white blood cells in the lymph nodes on the sides and back of the neck to migrate to the brain and clear beta amyloid plaques.
According to Tanuja Chitnis, M.D., principal investigator in the trial, “For 20 years, there has been growing evidence that the immune system plays a key role in eliminating beta amyloid. This vaccine harnesses a novel arm of the immune system to treat AD.” Chitnis is a professor of neurology at the hospital.
The phase 1 trial will include 16 patients between 60 and 85 years of age who have early, symptomatic Alzheimer disease but are otherwise in good general health. They will receive two doses of the nasal vaccine one week apart. Along with assessing the vaccine’s safety and how well patients tolerate it, the researchers will examine how it affects immune response, including its impact on white blood cells.
The trial is funded by I-Mab Biopharma and Jiangsu Nhwa Pharmaceutical, developers and makers of Protollin.
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