Current Research into Cures for Type-1 Diabetes
News and updates on potential cures for type-1 diabetes, that are in human (or clinical) trials.
Friday, January 31, 2025
Denosumab Starts A Phase-I Trial In People With Established T1D
Sunday, January 19, 2025
What To Watch In 2025
Siplizumab is a monoclonal antibody targeting CD2, which is part of the immune system. This study finished recruiting in Oct-2024, so I would expect results in late 2025. I blogged on this here:
Tuesday, December 31, 2024
Breakthrough T1D (formerly JDRF) Funding for a Cure 2024
Normally, sometime in October, I write a summary of all the clinical trials funded by JDRF. However, this year I didn't, which was a mistake. But late is better than never, so in this post I summarize the clinical trails that Breakthrough T1D (formerly JDRF) is funding as of October 1st, 2024.
I hope to remind everyone of how important Breakthrough T1D is to the human trials of potential cures for T1D, which I track.
Below is the list of all treatments, divided into six phases: FDA Approved, In Process of Approval, Phase-III, Phase-II, Phase-IIΔ, and Phase-I. Phase-II trials are "classic" phase-II trials, which are done after a Phase-I trial. What I call Phase-IIΔ trials test treatments which never went through phase-I trials on people with T1D. (I used to call those Phase-II? but I think using punctuation that way is confusing, so I'm using a delta instead: Phase-IIΔ.) They've been shown safe in other diseases, so have skipped phase-I trials on people with T1D. These Phase-IIΔ trials might be Phase-II from the point of view of size and safety, but they are Phase-I in terms of effectiveness, so I'm putting them in their own category.
For T1D research, phase-I studies are usually about 10 people and test for both safety and efficiency. In other diseases, phase-I trials are sometimes only done on healthy people, or only test for safety issues, but this is not the way T1D research is usually done. Over 90% of phase-I studies are done on people with T1D, and over 90% test for both safety and effectiveness.
Phase-II trials are about 100 people, and phase-III about 300. After two successful phase-III trials, the FDA considers approval for general use. These two studies can be run at the same time, and are often identical. Occasionally, only one phase-III trial is required for approval.
Approved or In Process of FDA Approval
In 2024, nothing was approved and nothing is in process of approval.Phase-III Human Trials
- Diamyd by Diamyd
- Oral Insulin (Preventative)
Not funded by JDRF:
- Ladarixin by Dompé
- ATG and GCSF by Haller at University of Florida (Established)
- Abatacept in honeymooners and as a prevention by Orban at Joslin Diabetes Center and Skyler at University of Miami (Prevention)
- Aldesleukin (Proleukin) at Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge, UK
- Diamyd in several combinations by Ludvigsson at Linköping University and Larsson at Lund University (Honeymoon and Prevention)
- Difluoromethylornithine (DFMO) by Panbela
- Gleevec by Gitelman at UCSF
- Gluten Free Diet: Three Studies (Preventative)
- Rituximab and Abatacept by TrialNet
- Stem Cell Educator by Zhao (Established)
- Tauroursodeoxycholic Acid (TUDCA)
- Tocilizumab by Greenbaum/Buckner at Benaroya Research Institute
- TOL-3021 by Bayhill Therapeutics (Honeymoon and Established)
- Umbilical Cord Blood Infusion by Haller at University of Florida
- Ustekinumab by University of British Columbia
- Verapamil by Shalev/Ovalle at University of Alabama at Birmingham
- ATG and autotransplant by several research groups: Burt, Snarski, and Li
- Dual Stem Cell by Tan at Fuzhou General Hospital
- Stem Cells of Arabia (Established)
- Vitamin D by Stephens at Nationwide Children's Hospital (Prevention)
Summary: there are 19 trials in phase-IIΔ, and 10 of them have been funded by Breakthrough T1D, while 9 have not. Here are the treatments that have been funded by Breakthrough T1D:
- Alpha Difluoromethylornithine (DFMO) by DiMeglio
- Baricitinib by St Vincent's Institute of Medical Research
- GABA by Diamyd
- Golimumab by Janssen (Honeymoon and Established)
- Hydroxychloroquine by Greenbaum (At Risk)
- Intranasal Insulin by Harrison at Melbourne Health (Prevention)
- Iscalimab (CFZ533) by Novartis
- Influenza Vaccination at Aarhus University Hospital
- Pleconaril and Ribavirin by Oslo University Hospital
- Siplizumab by NIH and ITB-Med LLC
- Abrocitinib or Ritlecitinib by NIH/Pfizer
- Azithromycin by Forsander
- BMF-219 by Biomea Fusion (Established)
- Fenofibrate at Warsaw Medical University
- Ixekizumab/Taltz by Vastra Gotaland Region
- Liraglutid (At Risk)
- NNC0114-0006 and Liraglutide by Novo-Norsk (Established)
- Rapamycin Vildagliptin Combo by IRCCS (Established)
- Visbiome by Medical College of Wisconsin
Summary: there are 21 trials in phase-I, and 13 of them are funded by Breakthrough T1D, while 8 are not. Here is the list funded by Breakthrough T1D:
- AG019 and Teplizumab by ActoGeniX
- DIMID1 (Faecal Microbiota Transplantation) at AMC Hospital
- Diamyd by Diamyd (At Risk)
- CGSF by Haller at University of Florida
- Golimumab (At Risk)
- MER3101 by Mercia (previously IBC-VS01 by Orban)
- Mozobil by University of Alberta (Established)
- PRV-101 (Coxsackie B Vaccine) by Provention Bio (Prevention)
- Semaglutide by Dandona at University of Buffalo
- TOPPLE T1D by Novo Nordisk (Established)
- VC-01 by Viacyte (Established)
- VCTX210A by Viacyte/CRISPR (Established)
- VX-264 by Vertex (Established)
- AVT001 by Avotres
- Baby Teeth Stem Cells by CAR-T Biotechnology
- Extracorporeal Photopheresis by ADSCC
- Gluten Free Diet by Carlsson at Lund University
- NN1845 (Glucose Sensitive Insulin) by Novo Nordisk
- OPT101 by Op-T (Established)
- PIpepTolDC at City of Hope Medical Center
- ProTrans by NextCell (Established)
62 in total
40 funded by JDRF
So 65% of the human trials currently underway are funded (either directly or indirectly) by JDRF. Everyone who donates to Breakthrough T1D should be proud of this huge impact; and everyone who works for Breakthrough T1D or volunteers for it, should be doubly proud.
Of these treatments 14 (23%) are being tested on people with established T1D, of those, 9 are funded by Breakthrough T1D. So 64% of the trials recruiting people with established T1D are funded by Breakthrough T1D.
In 2023 there were 59 treatments in clinical trials, in 2024 there are 62 (growth of 5%).
In 2023 there were 17 treatments in Phase-II trials, in 2024 there are 19 (growth of 11%).
In 2023 there were 14 treatments in Phase-IIΔ trials, in 2024 there are 19 (growth of 36%).
In 2023 there were 25 treatments in Phase-I trials, in 2024 there are 21 (dropped by 16%).
A Little Discussion
The money that we donate does many things:
- It finances more clinical trials (especially early clinical trials).
- It finances making clinical trials (especially early clinical trials) larger and better designed.
- It helps push possible cures to the next level of trial. It finances moving phase-I trials to phase-II, and phase-II to phase III.
Honeymoon: Most trials are done on people within the first year of diagnosis. All the studies listed above which are not Established, At Risk, or Prevention are in this Honeymoon category.
At Risk: One or more trials are open to people who have 2 or more autoantibodies, but have not yet started showing symptoms of type-1 diabetes.
Prevention: This treatment is aimed at preventing type-1 diabetes, not curing it.
If a trial is not marked, then it is for people in the honeymoon (first year) of T1D.
- I don't count trials where the Breakthrough T1D funded some basic research, but not the research which lead to a specific clinical trial. I'm sure this under estimates JDRF's impact. For example OPT101 is an anti CD154 drug. JDRF has funded many studies on CD154, but not the particular research that is being tested here. Similarly with Ixekizumab, JDRF has funded related research on that drug, but not the clinical trial or the research immediately leading to the clinical trial here.
- I mark the start of a research trial when the researchers start recruiting patients (and if there is any uncertainty, when the first patient is dosed). Some researchers talk about starting a trial when they submit the paper work, which is usually months earlier.
- For trials which use combinations of two or more different treatments, I give funding credit, if the organization in the past funded any component of a combination treatment, or if they are funding the current combined treatment.
- I have made no attempt to find out how much funding different organizations gave to different research. This would be next to impossible for long research programs, anyway.
- Funding of research is not my primary interest, so I don't spend a lot of time tracking down details in this area. I might be wrong on details.
- I only include intervention studies here, because those are the only type of study that the FDA will accept for the eventual approval of a new treatment.
- VX-880 is a transplant study which requires life long immunosuppression. Read here why I do not consider these to be cures.
- Levicure's Combination Therapy has only been tested in a retrospective study, not an intervention based clinical trial.
- Oral Insulin: This trial was a phase-III trial, meaning that it was large and designed to provide enough information so that, if successful, the treatment could be widely used. However, as it turned out, only part was successful, and that part was phase-II sized, so I don't think we will see widespread use based on this trial alone. You can think of this as a phase-III trial with phase-II results.
Finally, if you see any mistakes or oversights in this posting, please tell me! There is a lot of information packed into this small posting, and I've made mistakes in the past.
Monday, December 23, 2024
Fenofibrate Is Unsuccessful In A Phase-IIΔ Trial In Honeymooners
Contrary to the beneficial effects of fenofibrate found in preclinical studies, this longitudinal, randomized, placebo-controlled trial does not support the use of fenofibrate for preserving beta cell function in individuals with newly diagnosed type 1 diabetes.
Since my initial excitement was based on a person who did not need to inject insulin after taking Fenofibrate, it makes sense to look at the insulin use and compare the people who got the drug (in red below) with the people who got the placebo (in blue). You'll notice that the people who got the drug used a little more insulin. This is the exact opposite of success, although the difference was not statistically significant. Bottom line: it did not work.
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
Encellin Starts a Phase-I Trial of ENC-201-CED (Encapsulated Beta Cells)
Friday, November 8, 2024
Frexalimab Starts A Phase-IIΔ Clinical Trial (FABULINUS)
There are two good reasons to test Frexalimab as a cure or treatment for Type-1 Diabetes (T1D). The first is that it has shown some effectiveness in treating Multiple Sclerosis (MS). MS is an autoimmune disease, generally similar to T1D, except that the immune system in MS attacks nerve cells rather than beta cells. So the thinking goes, if it works for MS maybe it will work for T1D.
The second reason is more direct, but also a little more complex to explain. You can think of the immune system as being a large collection of different cells, often with CD or IL names. These cells interact in various ways to attack (or ignore) certain cells. Many immune responses are controlled by a balance between two different types of cells. One of these two-cell balance points is between CD40L/CD154 cells and CD40 cells. CD40L and CD154 are two different names for the same kind of cell and it balances the CD40 cell. They balance each other so the the immune system is aggressive enough to attack foreign cells, but not so aggressive as to attack the body's own cells. Frexalimab is a Monoclonal Antibody which is an antagonist to CD40L. That means it blocks the activity of CD40L cells in the immune system. The researchers involved have been looking at the balance between CD40L/CD154 and CD40 as part of the pathway causing T1D for at least 20 years. There is a lot of research showing that CD40L (and the relationship between CD40L and CD40) is important to the path that leads to T1D. Therefore, it makes a lot of sense to test drugs that impact CD40L.
The FABULINUS Study
This study is enrolling almost 200 people between 12 and 35 years old and within 90 days of T1D diagnosis. This is a randomized, controlled, blinded clinical trial with four groups (three different Frexalimab doses and a placebo).
People will get Frexalimab for a year, and then be followed for another year, and then there is the possibility of another follow up for another half year. Frexalimab will be given once intravenously (needle into a vein), and then weekly subcutaneously (injected under the skin, like insulin). The primary end point is C-Peptide after a year, and there are a bunch of secondary end points including C-Peptide at other times, blood glucose time in range, insulin usage (including what they call "remission"), and several other safety and effectiveness measures.
This study started in Dec-2023 and they hope to complete it by Nov-2028.
This study is huge, recruiting at 34 different locations (12 in the US, 2 in Canada, and 20 in Europe). The official contact information is:
Phone Number: 800-633-1610 ext. option 6
Email: contact-us@sanofi.com
Web Pages: https://www.innodia.org/fabulinus-trial and https://www.sanofistudies.com/us/en/listing/312876/frexalimab-in-preservation-of/
Clinical Trial Registry: https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT06111586
Poster: https://diabetesjournals.org/diabetes/article/73/Supplement_1/2021-LB/156038/2021-LB-FABULINUS-A-Randomized-Controlled-Trial
Buy In Bulk: https://www.medchemexpress.com/frexalimab.html
Discussion
It is clear that the researchers have very high hopes for this treatment. Three of their secondary end points include:
- Proportion of participants with A1c ≤6.5% and requiring no injections of exogenous insulin after 1 year or 2 years. This would be a practical cure: a non-diabetic A1c number without injecting insulin.
- Proportion of participants in "partial remission" which they define as insulin dose-adjusted A1c score ≤9.0, where it is calculated as A1c + 4x insulin dose when measured as IU/kg/day. So that means that if a person weighs 50 kg / 110 lb, and is injecting 10 units of insulin per day and has a A1c of 7, their adjusted A1c would be 7 + 0.2 x 4, which is 7.8 which is below 9 and is in "partial remission", as defined here. The 0.2 comes from 10 (units of insulin) / 50 kg per day.
- Proportion of participants with A1c ≤6.5% and requiring ≤0.25 IU per day per kilo of insulin after 1 year or 2 years. Using the same 50 kg / 110 lb kid as an example, he or she could inject up to 12 units of insulin per day and still meet this criteria of success, if their A1c was low enough. That would be a great outcome although not a cure by my definition.
A quick summary of Frexalimab's status for other diseases is this paragraph from a Royal Pharma press release. This sounds very optimistic, but remember that Royal Pharma has invested in Frexalimab, so they are not objective observers!
Frexalimab, in development by Sanofi, is a first-in-class, second generation anti-CD40 ligand monoclonal antibody. Frexalimab is in three Phase 3 clinical studies for the treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS). Phase 2 clinical studies for systemic lupus erythematosus and Type 1 Diabetes are ongoing. ... Sanofi anticipates filing a biologics license application (BLA) for relapsing multiple sclerosis with the U.S. Food & Drug Administration in 2027.
Source: https://www.royaltypharma.com/news/royalty-pharma-to-acquire-royalty-interest-in-sanofis-frexalimab/
Sunday, October 6, 2024
The full story on "Stem cells reverse woman’s diabetes — a world first"
- https://www.thejdca.org/publications/report-library/archived-reports/2016-reports/islet-cell-transplantation-update-new-phase-iii-study-results-show-insulin-independence-unchanged.html
- https://www.thejdca.org/publications/report-library/archived-reports/2022-reports/pioneering-islet-cell-transplant-team-publishes-20-years-of-data.html
- Several research groups are investigating encapsulation, so that the immune system cannot physically get to the new beta cells, which would protect them.
- Other groups are developing the process of converting stem cells to beta cells so that the new cells were invisible to the immune system and protected that way. The immune system tends to focus on very specific structures in the "skin" of the cell to identify what to attack. If those structures are missing, then maybe the immune system would ignore the new cells.
- The trigger of the autoimmune attack on beta cells might be time specific. It occurs at a specific time for a specific reason. So therefore, years later, when the new cells are transplanted, the trigger is no longer there and the cells will not be attacked.
- Finally, the immune attack on beta cells might be location specific. It occurs because of the situation in the pancreas specifically. Therefore beta cells not implanted in the pancreas won't trigger the immune response.