CLINICAL AND IMMUNOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF T C ELL-BASED VACCINE THERAPY IN PATIENTS WITH PROGREDIENT MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS
Abstract. Thirty-nine patients with a progredient clinical form of chronic multiple sclerosis (MS) were subject to multiple immunization with autologous polyclonal T-cell vaccines. Two years after initiating the vaccine therapy, no evidence for disease progression was noted in 16 patients (41% of to...
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| Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
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| Format: | Article |
| Language: | Russian |
| Published: |
St. Petersburg branch of the Russian Association of Allergologists and Clinical Immunologists
2014-07-01
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| Series: | Медицинская иммунология |
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://www.mimmun.ru/mimmun/article/view/303 |
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| Summary: | Abstract. Thirty-nine patients with a progredient clinical form of chronic multiple sclerosis (MS) were subject to multiple immunization with autologous polyclonal T-cell vaccines. Two years after initiating the vaccine therapy, no evidence for disease progression was noted in 16 patients (41% of total). Neurological improvement was observed in five cases (13%) from the vaccine-treated group. Of 22 control MS patients who did not receive the immunotherapy, only 6 persons (27%) exhibited stabilization of their clinical state. Clinical improvement was not detectable among this group of MS patients. A group of twenty-six MS patients was treated with Rebif, without evidence of disease progression in eleven cases (42%), and distinct neurological improvement noted in one patient (4%) from this group. One year after starting the vaccine therapy, a rise in serum IL-10 was detected in vaccine-treated patients, whereas IL-17 and IL-18 serum levels remained within the initial ranges. A correlation between the serum levels of anti-myelin antibodies and appropriate anti-idiotypic antibodies was revealed in these patients. In general, the results obtained suggest polyclonal T-cell vaccination as a potentially effective treatment approach, both at early and more advanced stages of the disorder. |
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| ISSN: | 1563-0625 2313-741X |