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    Jefferson Adams
    Jefferson Adams

    First Ever Celiac Disease Vaccine Trials Underway in Australia

    Reviewed and edited by a celiac disease expert.

    Celiac.com 04/06/2009 - Celiac sufferers around the globe are anxiously awaiting word from Australia, as the world's first vaccine trials for the treatment of celiac disease get underway in Melbourne. In April, Bob Anderson, of the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical research, will begin the initial phase of the first-ever trials for a celiac vaccine that, if successful, might just mean the end of gluten-free diets for those with celiac disease.

    The treatment has been successful in mice and is now ready to be tested on humans. In this initial phase, 40 volunteers with celiac disease will receive doses of the vaccine over an 11-month period to determine that it will cause no harm. Once researchers make sure the vaccine is safe, they will begin phase II trial, wherein they give vaccine doses to trial subjects and evaluate their responses to gluten challenges to determine the efficacy of the vaccine. Evaluation will include an examination of immune response and intestinal condition to determine the level of gluten tolerance.

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    The vaccine therapy involves repeatedly injecting solutions of gluten at increasing concentrations. The goal is to reduce and ultimately eliminate gluten sensitivity slowly, in a manner similar to common allergy desensitization treatments. The road to the development of this treatment has not been easy. Dr. Anderson is that rare combination of medical doctor (gastroenterologist) and PhD scientist who is able to develop practical treatments from bedside observations. After struggling to gain funding throughout his research career, he eventually patented his vaccine and co-founded Nexpep in an effort to develop the vaccine on his own. Because, like common dust and hay fever allergy therapies, this treatment approach may allow people with celiac disease to actually consume the gluten that produces the toxic reaction and reduce or even eliminate that reaction via vaccination. This approach will also serve as a model for a vaccine approach for other immune conditions such as type 1 diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis.

    Until recently, doctors thought celiac disease was rare. But according to statistics, it is twice as common as type1 diabetes or breast cancer. Celiac disease is now known to strike one per cent of Americans, but although modern blood testing has made early detection accurate and efficient, most people with celiac disease still do not know that they have it. Just 3% of sufferers have been diagnosed, leaving nearly 3 million people undiagnosed, and therefore unable to benefit form simple treatment in the form of a gluten-free diet. Long-term risks for untreated celiac disease include malnutrition, infertility, osteoporotic fractures, liver failure and various cancers. Symptoms can vary between individuals, with some experiencing no symptoms at all, even though damage to the bowel and general health still occurs whether or not symptoms are present.

    Presently, long-term monitoring of dietary compliance for celiac patients is haphazard at best, and standards for gluten-free products have yet to take effect in the USA and other countries. Geoff Withers, director of pediatric gastroenterology at Brisbane's Royal Children's Hospital, points out that a gluten-free diet is "notoriously difficult. It is expensive and lifelong, and comes at a cost to the individual." Even treatment with a gluten-free disease is no panacea. People on gluten-free diets routinely suffer from a deficiency of certain vitamins, especially B vitamins. Roughly half of those following gluten-free diets have impaired intestinal healing due to compliance issues, and that means they are in danger of associated risks which include cancer.

    A successful vaccine could have massive consequences for treatment of celiac disease, and might radically improve the lives of those with the condition.



    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Guest Alex

    'Geoff Withers, director of pediatric Gastroenterology at Brisbane's Royal Children's Hospital, points out that a gluten-free diet is notoriously difficult. It is expensive and lifelong, and comes at a cost to the individual.'

     

    I disagree with that statement. There are two choices you can make if you are gluten-sensitive:

     

    1. Eat the same crap you ate before, but pay twice as much for the gluten-free version, and still have to worry every single meal whether it's really gluten-free.

     

    or

     

    2. Change permanently to the Paleo Diet (eat meat, vegetables, fruit, nuts/seeds) and never have to worry again because those foods are by nature gluten-free.

     

    Plus, you reap tremendous health benefits from eating this way and cutting out the bad carbs, sugar, dairy, and grains.

     

    It's easy, affordable, safe, and the healthiest nutrition possible.

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    Guest Yalcin

    Posted

    Great news!

     

    ''The vaccine therapy involves repeatedly injecting solutions of gluten at increasing concentrations. ''

     

    Is the thought that if one bypasses the gut and injects gluten directly in the blood, the body will accept it rather than attack the gluten?

     

    I thought Dr Anderson was developing 2 types of vaccines, one for DQ2 and the other for DQ8.

     

    I am no doctor, but I would think that an injection with a small dose of gluten is easy to make for a doctor.

     

    Dr Anderson thank you very much

    for your efforts. Hopefully you will

    succeed.

     

    Greetings,

     

    Yalcin

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    Guest Sue H of Aurora, IL, USA

    Posted

    This brought a huge smile on my face - that someone in the medicine/research field actually cares about us to develop a vaccine! When my teenage son was tested for a full array of food allergies at the Allergy Associates of LaCrosse, WI, he was given sublingual allergy immunotherapy or 'allergy drops' to desensitize his food allergies which included gluten (FYI - he did not test positive for celiac despite family history of celiac disease). He continues to eat gluten here and there while taking daily drops and the two of us family members with celiac disease have noticed that his reactions to gluten have progressively become much more tolerable (unlike ours). With people like Dr. Anderson and my son's allergist, Dr. Kroker, will indeed figure out ways to assist our immune system in tolerating gluten. I will be anxious to learn of Dr. Anderson's results.

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    Guest Merovign

    Posted

    Do I completely misunderstand Celiac disease? An autoimmune reaction in the intestine, right?

     

    I'd like to know a LOT more about the tests - it seems that this would be attempting to either deaden the symptoms or deaden the immune system. Doesn't a vaccination trigger a MORE efficient immune system response?

     

    I look forward to improved treatment or even a cure as much as anyone, it just seems that a lot of the "cure" talk is about symptoms (and not damage) or short-term effects.

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    Guest tarek ouri

    Posted

    Me and all the kids with celiac disease will be happy if it is true and it will happen so that I can eat bread again--I am dreaming of this day.

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    Guest eilam

    Posted

    I have celiac so this is great news for me.

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    Guest Daniel Sanelli

    Posted

    This is what confuses me. Celiac disease is an autoimmune disease. The vaccine may calm the affects of the gluten on the immune system, but this isn't the only trigger. It sounds like a good cure for gluten sensitivity, but I'm not sure I understand how this is a cure for Celiac.

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    Guest Morgen P

    Posted

    Honestly, being 18 years old and being diagnosed with this disease at the age of 15... Is something, either it treats it completely or just helps with it... ANYTHING is great! I've always loved my breads and such & knowing that in the near future I might actually be able to have a delicious slice of Domino's Pizza or even my best friend's birthday cake... It's simply a blessing!

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    Guest Morgen P

    Posted

    'Geoff Withers, director of pediatric Gastroenterology at Brisbane's Royal Children's Hospital, points out that a gluten-free diet is notoriously difficult. It is expensive and lifelong, and comes at a cost to the individual.'

     

    I disagree with that statement. There are two choices you can make if you are gluten-sensitive:

     

    1. Eat the same crap you ate before, but pay twice as much for the gluten-free version, and still have to worry every single meal whether it's really gluten-free.

     

    or

     

    2. Change permanently to the Paleo Diet (eat meat, vegetables, fruit, nuts/seeds) and never have to worry again because those foods are by nature gluten-free.

     

    Plus, you reap tremendous health benefits from eating this way and cutting out the bad carbs, sugar, dairy, and grains.

     

    It's easy, affordable, safe, and the healthiest nutrition possible.

    But, those diets don't help people that have gained other autoimmune diseases because of celiac. Such as allergies to corn, rice, dairy products, etc.

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    Guest charlie

    Posted

    I hope this all works out and that many people will be helped.

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    Guest Rebbecca

    Posted

    'Geoff Withers, director of pediatric Gastroenterology at Brisbane's Royal Children's Hospital, points out that a gluten-free diet is notoriously difficult. It is expensive and lifelong, and comes at a cost to the individual.'

     

    I disagree with that statement. There are two choices you can make if you are gluten-sensitive:

     

    1. Eat the same crap you ate before, but pay twice as much for the gluten-free version, and still have to worry every single meal whether it's really gluten-free.

     

    or

     

    2. Change permanently to the Paleo Diet (eat meat, vegetables, fruit, nuts/seeds) and never have to worry again because those foods are by nature gluten-free.

     

    Plus, you reap tremendous health benefits from eating this way and cutting out the bad carbs, sugar, dairy, and grains.

     

    It's easy, affordable, safe, and the healthiest nutrition possible.

    I agree with the paleo diet, although it can be hard at times, but well worth it, i have been on a Paleo diet for three weeks, as I am celiac and was getting pain, and feeling sick from eating to much gluten free grains, such as rice and corn based products. So i feel great now, pain free, not feeling sick anymore and full of energy. Plus it forces me to eat more fruit and vegetables, which we tend not to eat enough off, with our busy lifestyles.

    P.S I still sneak in dairy now and again, I love dairy.

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    Guest Laura Ross

    Posted

    Can I have an update on this?! I have celiac and am so upset by it--I'm still fairly new to it. Please, let me know how this vaccine went, I WANT IT!!

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  • About Me

    Jefferson Adams

    Jefferson Adams is Celiac.com's senior writer and Digital Content Director. He earned his B.A. and M.F.A. at Arizona State University. His articles, essays, poems, stories and book reviews have appeared in numerous magazines, journals, and websites, including North American Project, Antioch Review, Caliban, Mississippi Review, Slate, and more. He is the author of more than 2,500 articles on celiac disease. His university coursework includes studies in science, scientific methodology, biology, anatomy, physiology, medicine, logic, and advanced research. He previously devised health and medical content for Colgate, Dove, Pfizer, Sharecare, Walgreens, and more. Jefferson has spoken about celiac disease to the media, including an appearance on the KQED radio show Forum, and is the editor of numerous books, including "Cereal Killers" by Scott Adams and Ron Hoggan, Ed.D.

    >VIEW ALL ARTICLES BY JEFFERSON ADAMS

     


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