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Research Article

T-cell vaccination in Crohn's disease: principles and presentation of the first two cases

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Pages 117-123 | Published online: 26 Sep 2009
 

Abstract

In Crohn's disease (CD) CD4+ T-cells producing tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and interferon-γ (IFN-γ) are important for disease progression. T-cell vaccination with such attenuated (γ-irradiated) CD4+ T cells may ameliorate the auto-reactive actions of Type-1 T cells through stimulation of interleukin-10 (IL-10)-producing regulatory T cells. This study aimed to propagate and use gut-derived type-1 CD4+ T-cells for vaccination in CD. In a case study, two patients with CD-activity index (CDAI) >150 for >1 year were vaccinated with 800×106 attenuated autologous gut-derived CD4+ T cells producing Type-1 cytokine -- grown in the presence of high concentrations of only IL-2 and IL-4. The T-cell vaccination was safe, causing only minor redness and tenderness at the injection sites. In Case 2, the treatment brought 3-years with active steroid-resistant CD into remission. CDAI dropped from 171 to 76, CD-endoscopic index of severity fell from 20 to eight and C-reactive protein reduced from 165 to 70 nmol/L. Case 1 received rescue infliximab (there was disease progression before sufficient quantities of cells were ready for the second vaccination). We concluded that it is possible to propagate T cells for autologous vaccination for CD and that treatment was safe. One patient, vaccinated according to the protocol, improved with sustained result for >1 year.

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