BCG vaccine leads to long-term improvement in blood sugar levels in type 1 diabetes patients
Mass. General study finds novel mechanism underlying stable, durable blood sugar control
Long-term follow-up of participants in clinical trials of a generic vaccine to reverse advanced type 1 diabetes finds significant clinical benefits, including restoration of near-normal blood sugar levels. Three years after receiving two administrations of the bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine four weeks apart, all members of a group of adults with longstanding type 1 diabetes showed an improvement in HbA1c to near normal levels – improvement that persisted for the following five years. The study from a Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) research team – published in npj Vaccines – also reports that the effects of BCG vaccine on blood sugar control appear to depend on a totally novel metabolic mechanism that increases cellular consumption of glucose.
“This is clinical validation of the potential to stably lower blood sugars to near normal levels with a safe vaccine, even in patients with longstanding disease,” says Denise Faustman, MD, PhD, director of the MGH Immunobiology Laboratory, principal investigator of BCG clinical trials at MGH and senior author of the npj Vaccines report. “In addition to the clinical outcomes, we now have a clear understanding of the mechanisms through which limited BCG vaccine doses can make permanent, beneficial changes to the immune system and lower blood sugars in type 1 diabetes.”
Faustman, an associate professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical
School, will also present five-year follow-up results of a
separate group of BCG clinical trial participants with
longstanding type 1 diabetes on Saturday, June 23, at the 78th
Scientific Sessions of the American Diabetes Association in
Orlando.
Used for almost a century to prevent
tuberculosis, BCG has been known for more than 30 years to boost
production of a cytokine called tumor necrosis factor (TNF),
which may be beneficial in autoimmune diseases both by
eliminating the autoreactive T cells that attack an
individual’s tissues – in the case of type 1
diabetes, pancreatic islets – and by inducing production
of regulatory T cells (Tregs) that could prevent an autoimmune
reaction. Faustman’s team first reported in 2001 that
inducing TNF production could cure type 1 diabetes in mice, but
since TNF dosing is toxic in humans, clinical trials have
utilized BCG for its ability to elevate TNF levels safely.
Initial clinical trial results, published in a
2012 PLOS One paper, reported that two doses of BCG spaced four weeks apart led to
reductions in autoreactive T cells, an increase in Tregs and
what turned out to be a transient increase in insulin
production. But by the end of that short, 20-week trial, there
was no reduction in HbA1c, the established measure of blood
sugar levels over time. An extension and expansion of that trial
with long term follow-up, the current results are based on data
from 282 human study participants – 52 with type 1
diabetes who participated in the BCG clinical trials and 230 who
contributed blood samples for mechanistic studies.
Regular monitoring of clinical trial participants
found that HbA1c levels of those receiving BCG had dropped by
more than 10 percent at three years after treatment and by more
than 18 percent at four years. That reduction was maintained
over the next four years, with treated participants having an
average HbA1c of 6.65, close to the 6.5 considered the threshold
for diabetes diagnosis, and with no reports of severe
hypoglycemia. Participants in the placebo group and in a
comparison group of patients receiving no treatment experienced
consistent HbA1c elevations over the same eight-year time
period.
In investigating how BCG administration
produces its beneficial effects, the research team identified a
mechanism never previously seen in humans in response to
treatment with any drug – a shifting of the process of
glucose metabolism from oxidative phosphorylation, the most
common pathway by which cells convert glucose into energy, to
aerobic glycolysis, a process that involves significantly
greater glucose consumption by cells. The researchers also found
that BCG could reduce blood sugar elevations in mice that were
caused by means other than autoimmune attack, raising the
possibility that BCG vaccines could also be beneficial against
type 2 diabetes.
Mihai G. Netea, PhD, professor in
the Department of Internal Medicine at Radboud University
Medical Center in the Netherlands, says of this study,
“The clinical effects and the proposed mechanism
demonstrated are exciting and add to the emerging consensus that
the BCG vaccine can have a lasting and valuable impact on the
immune system. We know, and this study shows, that BCG
vaccination induces epigenetic reprogramming at the chromatin
architecture level and functional alterations indicative of a
permanent change in immunity. The MGH trials and other, larger
prevention and intervention trials underway around the globe may
lead to a major shift in the prevention and treatment of
infections and autoimmunity.” Netea was not involved in
the current study.
The MGH team’s findings set
the stage for further testing of BCG administration, including
the FDA-approved phase 2 study currently underway, testing
multiple BCG doses in a large group of participants with
longstanding type 1 diabetes. That trial is fully enrolled, and
there are seven additional BCG clinical trial groups currently
recruiting or enrolling at MGH, with a pediatric trial in the
planning stages. The MGH BCG clinical trial program is entirely
funded by private philanthropy from individuals and family
foundations, including the Iacocca Foundation. Additional
information about clinical trials, including information for
potential participants and financial supporters, is available
at http://www.faustmanlab.org
or by emailing
[email protected].
The lead author of the npj Vaccines paper is Willem M.
Kühtreiber, PhD, MGH Immunobiology Laboratories. Additional
co-authors are Lisa Tran, Taesoo Kim, Michael Dybala, Brian
Nguyen, Sara Plager, Daniel Huang, Sophie Janes, Audrey Defusco,
and Danielle Baum, MGH Immunobiology; and Hui Zheng, PhD, MGH
Biostatistics.
Massachusetts General Hospital,
founded in 1811, is the original and largest teaching hospital
of Harvard Medical School. The MGH Research Institute
conducts the largest hospital-based research program in the
nation, with an annual research budget of more than $900 million
and major research centers in HIV/AIDS, cardiovascular research,
cancer, computational and integrative biology, cutaneous
biology, genomic medicine, medical imaging, neurodegenerative
disorders, regenerative medicine, reproductive biology, systems
biology, photomedicine and transplantation biology. The MGH
topped the 2015 Nature Index list of health care organizations
publishing in leading scientific journals and earned the
prestigious 2015 Foster G. McGaw Prize for Excellence in
Community Service. In August 2017 the MGH was once again named
to the Honor Roll in the U.S. News & World Report list of
"America's Best Hospitals."
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Massachusetts General Hospital