Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Saying goodbye to ‘gluten-free’

Vaccine for celiac disease could make it possible

- By Serena Gordon HealthDay

People with celiac disease must follow a very restrictiv­e diet, but an experiment­al vaccine may offer many of them the freedom to eat more normally.

Celiac disease is an autoimmune disorder. If someone with the disease eats gluten — a protein found in wheat, barley and rye — it can damage the small intestine.

The vaccine, dubbed Nexvax2, is designed to elicit an immune system response in about 90 percent of people with celiac disease — specifical­ly those who carry a gene that allows their immune system to “see” the vaccine.

“People with celiac disease often are afraid of food. Nexvax2 will give them freedom to be able to live life and not be afraid of eating out,” said Leslie Williams, CEO of ImmusanT, the company developing the vaccine.

Eating a gluten-free diet isn’t easy, according to Alice Bast, CEO of Beyond Celiac, a nonprofit research organizati­on. Cross-contaminat­ion with foods containing gluten is always a concern, she explained.

“Because people with celiac disease note that their toughest challenges are when dining out, socializin­g and traveling, an effective treatment could bring back some of the freedoms people in our community have lost,” Bast said.

“If (Nexvax2) is effective, it may one day be used to enable people with celiac disease to eat a normal diet that contains gluten without damaging their system or getting sick,” she said.

About 1 percent of Americans have celiac disease. Symptoms include stomach pain and bloating, diarrhea, vomiting, constipati­on, weight loss, fatigue, and delayed growth and puberty. Long-term problems can include malnutriti­on and nervous system problems.

The current treatment is avoiding gluten. But gluten is found in many foods and products such as lipstick. Even foods that don’t directly contain gluten may be contaminat­ed by gluten during the production process. Something as simple as a gluten-free chicken cutlet being fried in a pan previously used to cook a breaded (containing gluten) chicken cutlet may cause damage to someone with celiac disease, Bast explained.

Williams said that inadverten­t gluten exposures like that occur an average of three to four times a month.

Nexvax2 works by reprogramm­ing the T cells in the immune system that attack the small intestine in people with celiac disease. The injectable vaccine makes these cells nonrespons­ive to gluten exposure, Williams said.

The maintenanc­e injections can be given at home with a device that automatica­lly injects the vaccine under the skin. Williams said people would likely need to give themselves a shot once a week to protect themselves from inadverten­t gluten exposures.

ImmusanT has completed five phase 1 trials of Nexvax2, Williams said. Early trials caused patients to vomit, so the initial vaccine dose was lowered. Then it’s slowly increased until people are exposed to an amount of gluten that’s about equivalent to two loaves of bread.

Williams said the vaccine was safe and welltolera­ted in the early trials. Because it affects a specific part of the immune system, she said there aren’t concerns about immune system suppressio­n.

ImmusanT is planning a six-month phase 2 study on the vaccine. It will include 150 people with celiac disease from 40 sites in the U.S., Australia and New Zealand, Williams noted. She said it’s too soon to predict when the vaccine might potentiall­y be available. It’s also too soon to estimate the cost, she said.

Bast said that Nexvax2 isn’t the only possible treatment for celiac disease in developmen­t.

“There are more than a dozen therapies in the research pipeline. Nexvax2 is one of three therapeuti­c vaccines under investigat­ion. Other approaches include preventing gluten from being absorbed by the body, breaking the gluten down using enzymes, and managing the body’s reaction to gluten after it is absorbed,” Bast said.

 ?? GETTY ?? Gluten is found in many products; even foods that don’t directly contain gluten may be contaminat­ed by it.
GETTY Gluten is found in many products; even foods that don’t directly contain gluten may be contaminat­ed by it.

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