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October
14, 2005
New Rheumatoid Arthritis Drug Developed
At UCSD Promises Improved Treatment Option
By Debra Kain
Researchers at
the UCSD School of Medicine have announced successful completion
of Phase II clinical trials of a novel drug for the treatment
of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), one that works without suppressing
the patient’s immune system.
Salvatore
Albani, M.D., Ph.D, professor of medicine and pediatrics and
Director of the Translational Research Unit of the Clinical
Investigation Institute (CII) at the UCSD School of Medicine,
recently presented a summary of the findings at the “Frontiers
of Clinical Investigation Symposium.” The symposium, sponsored
by the CII and Nature Medicine, was held in La Jolla,
California in September.
The new drug, dnaJP1,
is a peptide derived from a naturally occurring protein, dnaJ,
which generates inflammation in RA patients, whose inflammatory-control
mechanisms are impaired. The impairment causes the body’s
T cells – which trigger inflammation to kill and clear
foreign pathogens in the body – to attack the body’s
own tissues.
“In essence,
we re-educated the immune system T cells to be tolerant of the
dnaJP1 amino acid sequence, which would usually contribute to
inflammation in rheumatoid arthritis patients,” Albani
said.
DnaJP1 works by resetting
the ability of the patient’s immune system to tolerate
dnaJ, thus transforming a potentially damaging trigger into
a tool for controlling the disease. Oral ingestion of dnaJP1
is key, because the mucosal immune system found in the gut has
the ability to “teach” the body to view a protein
as one that isn’t dangerous or foreign. Much as food is
ingested into the body and not rejected, the body tolerates
dnaJP1.
Current medications
for treating RA range from anti-inflammatory drugs, such as
aspirin, to corticosteroids and medicines that alleviate symptoms
by suppressing or killing the body’s immune response,
basically crippling the body’s ability to defend itself
against other infectious diseases or cancer.
“Such drugs
are costly, have potentially dangerous side effects and are
inconvenient to administer,” Albani said. “Our drug
leaves the patient’s natural immune responses intact.
This differs profoundly from what is currently available to
patients.”
DnaJP1 was found effective
in a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial sponsored by the
National Institutes of Health, which took place between 2000
and 2005 and involved 160 patients enrolled in centers nationwide
including UCSD, Stanford University, Johns Hopkins University,
the Mayo Clinic, and Virginia Mason Medical Center in Seattle.
The technology was developed at UCSD and has been licensed for
further development to Androclus Therapeutics, a biotechnology
company located in San Diego and Milan, Italy. Dr. Albani is
one of the company’s co-founders.
Patients received 25mg
of dnaJP1 daily by mouth for six months, and the treatment was
found to be safe and well-tolerated. When compared with a placebo,
patients in the treatment group experienced lessening of symptoms
such as swollen joints, tenderness, pain and decreased mobility.
Improvement was particularly significant at the follow up visits,
indicating a lasting effect of the drug. Efficacy was quantified
in data generated from physicians, patients and laboratories,
measuring improvement according to standards set by the American
College of Rheumatology (ACR) from the beginning to later points
in the trial. For instance, “ACR 20” indicates a
20% improvement in standardized symptoms. ACR 20 response was
in the 50-55% range; ACR 50 in the 30-40% range; and ACR 70
in the 15-20% range of patients completing the trial.
Rheumatoid arthritis,
or inflammation of the joints, is a chronic, painful disease
affecting one percent of the U.S. population, or more than 2
million people. It occurs three times more often in women than
men, targeting people of every age. The condition simultaneously
strikes joints on both sides of the body, such as the hands
or feet or knees but can also affect the skin, eyes, lungs,
heart, blood, nerves or kidneys. It is an incurable disease,
with most therapies focusing on symptom relief.
“Although the
current available drugs pose risks to patients, the first two
trials of dnaJP1 have not raised any significant safety concerns
and offer an improved treatment option for patients with rheumatoid
arthritis,” said Albani. The next step, according to Albani,
is to get approval and funding to move into Phase III clinical
trials.
“This is a very
exciting and novel therapeutic approach, which holds the promise
to be an entirely new type of immunomodulatory drug –
one that can shape a patient’s immune system, rather than
suppressing it,” said Gary S. Firestein, M.D., Director
of CII (http://cii.ucsd.edu/),
which provides UCSD faculty with an infrastructure to support
the translation of fundamental biology into novel therapeutic
interventions. “It is also an Institute success story
because it represents a true ‘bench to bedside’
research model.”
Media Contact: Debra
Kain 619-543-6163
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