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http://www.jpost.com/Editions/2001/11/23/News/News.38639.html
Weizmann scientists
develop first diabetes vaccine
By Judy Siegel
REHOVOT (November 23) - Scientists at the Weizmann Institute in Rehovot have
developed the first successful vaccine for Type I diabetes.
The vaccine blocks the immune system's destruction of pancreatic beta cells in
humans.
The drug, DiaPep277, offers the possibility both of preventing the onset of the
disease in those with a genetic risk and of halting its progression in those
whose cells have already begun to die.
With Phase II trials on DiaPep 277 successfully completed, Phase III trials are
to begin in various centers around the world next year. Peptor Ltd. - the
Rehovot biopharmaceutical company that purchased the rights - is planning to
present an application to the US Food and Drug Administration in 2004.
A team of researchers, led by Weizmann's Irun Cohen, has worked more than 10
years on a small peptide fragment known as p277, despite skepticism among
others in the field about its possible efficacy.
Results on a mouse model were dramatic, and the team proceeded to show its
efficacy on patients, 200 of whom have been treated successfully so far here
and in England, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Germany. Based on the results of their
research, Peptor developed DiaPep 277.
Cohen, Dr. Dana Elias (then a postdoctoral fellow at Weizmann and now vice
president for research and development at Peptor), and colleagues will report
on the clinical study performed at Hadassah-University Hospital in Jerusalem's
Ein Kerem by Itamar Raz, president of the Israel Diabetes Association and head
of the hospital's diabetes unit, in tomorrow's issue of the British journal The
Lancet.
The researchers proved three injections in six months of DiaPep277 were
successful in arresting the progression of Type l diabetes in newly diagnosed
patients - without displaying any harmful or significant side effects and
without participants leaving the study.
Recent data show 120 million-140 million people suffer from one of the two
types of diabetes.
Type I (insulin-dependent) usually results from an autoimmune disorder in which
the immune system mistakenly attacks the body's insulin-producing pancreatic
cells, reducing and ultimately stopping all insulin production. Sufferers need
to test their blood sugar levels and inject insulin several times daily.
Type II is a metabolic disorder resulting from the body's inability to properly
use insulin. Patients with the more severe cases of Type II diabetes must
supplement their natural insulin production with insulin injections.
The Phase II study was of 35 male patients 16-55 who were newly diagnosed with
Type I. Eighteen received injections of DiaPep277 at the beginning of the
study, at one month, and at six months; 17 received three injections of a
placebo. Those who received DiaPep277 showed a halt or delay in the attack
upon, or destruction of, their beta cells when examined at a follow-up 10
months after the first injection. These results were evident in the level of
the body's own insulin production and thus a decreased need for insulin
injections. The researchers were able to trace the mechanism of this
improvement to changes in the patients' immune lymphocytes, called T-cells.
Those receiving the placebo showed a significant decline in their natural
insulin production and a persistent rise in the need for insulin injections.
"The older you are, the slower the progression of beta-cell
destruction," Cohen said
In children, the destruction of pancreatic cells is very rapid, taking place
even in a few months, Raz said. People at genetic risk for the disease who are
exposed to a specific virus, toxic material, or food are likely to develop Type
I diabetes. Phase II trials on children seven to 16 showed an improvement, but
it was not statistically significant.
Younger children are now being tested using this strategy, Elias said.
For the past several years, Cohen and his team have been studying the mechanism
by which the immune system destroys the insulin-producing pancreatic cells.
Working with mice, they discovered a particular protein is closely linked to
this destructive process. It acts like an antigen, prompting the immune cells
to attack. Further investigation revealed injecting diabetic mice with p277 - a
small peptide fragment of the protein - shut down the immune response,
preventing the progression of Type I diabetes.
The peptide essentially acts to "re-educate" the immune cells,
switching off their destructive activity, Cohen said.
The idea for using p277 stemmed from the discovery the immune system has
different options to choose from in responding to an antigen. It can act to
destroy the antigen or protect it from destruction. In this case, it indirectly
prevents the pancreatic cells from being destroyed.
About 15 agents have been found to halt destruction of beta cells in mice, but
none of them worked in humans, Raz said.
"No one believed it would work in people," he said.
Peptor, which was established in 1993, now has 51 employees here and in
Germany. It will soon start preliminary testing on two other peptides,
including one for kidney damage due to diabetes.
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