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Tiny needles ease peanut allergies in mice

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Treating peanut allergies with microneedles could significantly improve desensitization by directly targeting the allergen to the skin, a new study with mice shows.

The method could provide greater protection from severe allergic reactions for millions of people.

The researchers tested a dermal stamp containing peanut-coated microneedles on mice by applying it to the skin for five minutes once a week over five weeks. They compared that to mice receiving epicutaneous immunotherapy, which involves wearing a patch on the skin for 24 hours over the same time period.

The results in Immunotherapy reveal mice that received the five weekly microneedle treatments had significant increased rates of desensitization to peanut allergy compared with EPIT, which required two months of treatment to achieve protection.

The microneedle patch has a metal square covered in tiny needles set in a circular, white patch
Microneedle patch device. (Credit: Moonlight Therapeutics)

The microneedle treatment success was achieved despite applying a dose of peanut protein 10-times lower than the dose delivered by EPIT.

“While our pre-clinical results are from studies in animal models, they demonstrate the potential for peanut microneedles to improve food allergen immunotherapy through the skin,” says senior author Jessica O’Konek, research assistant professor at the Mary H. Weiser Food Allergy Center at Michigan Medicine at the University of Michigan.

“Treatment options for food allergy are limited, so there is a lot of motivation for the development of novel therapeutics. It will be exciting to watch the clinical development of this technology,” she says.

Around 6 million Americans have a peanut allergy, with symptoms that can range from mild hives to potentially fatal anaphylactic reactions. Currently, orally administered immunotherapy is the only treatment for peanut allergy approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration. However, it requires that patients follow a strict long-term protocol for ingesting each dose.

Researchers have demonstrated in clinical trials that EPIT is safe, but the treatment showed variability in efficacy. O’Konek believes this could be due to the barrier provided by the skin surface, which may limit the amount of allergen taken up by the body. Targeted delivery of peanut protein with microneedle patches may offer more controlled delivery of allergen.

“This is a very interesting technology that could provide a unique method to desensitize people with food allergies,” says coauthor James R. Baker, Jr., director of the Mary H. Weiser Food Allergy Center. “These successful animal results argue for further development of this platform.”

Additional coauthors are from Texas Tech University, Moonlight Therapeutics, Inc., and the University of Michigan.

The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases funded the work. The content does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.

The microneedle device used in the study was based on the proprietary treatment platform TASIS (Targeted Allergen-Specific Immunotherapy within the Skin) developed by Atlanta-based Moonlight Therapeutics. Coauthors Akhilesh Kumar Shakya and Harvinder Singh Gill are co-inventors on a patent related to coated microneedles for allergen immunotherapy and have equity in Moonlight Therapeutics, which is pursuing this technology for developing microneedles for peanut and other food allergy immunotherapies. Gill and Shakya have equity in Moonlight Therapeutics. Vladimir Zarnitsyn and Samirkumar R. Patel are employees of Moonlight Therapeutics and have equity in the company. The authors have no other relevant affiliations or financial involvement with any organization or entity with a financial interest in or financial conflict with the subject matter or materials discussed in the manuscript apart from those disclosed.

Source: Noah Fromson for University of Michigan

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