: Walczak et al. Transdermal Application of Myelin Peptides in Multiple Sclerosis Treatment. JAMA Neurol. 2013 Jul 1:1-6. doi: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2013.3022.: Demonstration of efficacious antigen-specific therapy in multiple sclerosis.: To assess the safety and efficacy of transdermally applied myelin peptides in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis. DESIGN One-year double-blind, placebo-controlled cohort study.: Thirty outpatients aged 18 to 55 years with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis.

INTERVENTION: Skin patch with a mixture of 3 myelin peptides, MBP85-99, MOG35-55, and PLP139-155.



MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Cumulative number of active gadolinium-enhanced (Gd+) lesions per patient per scan, mean volume of Gd+ lesions, cumulative number of new T2 lesions, and T2 lesion and T1 lesion volume change from baseline to the end of the study. Total number of relapses during the year of the study per patient (annual relapse rate), proportion of relapse-free patients, and proportion of patients with 3 months of confirmed disability worsening on the Expanded Disability Status Scale at month 12.



RESULTS: All patients completed the study. Compared with placebo, treatment with a myelin peptide skin patch (1 mg) showed a 66.5% reduction in the cumulative number of Gd+ lesions (P = .02) during the 12 months of the study. The annual relapse rate in patients treated with a mixture of myelin peptides (1 mg) was significantly lower compared with the placebo group (0.43 vs 1.4; P = .007). Treatment with a myelin peptide skin patch was well tolerated and no serious adverse events were reported.



CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, treatment with a myelin peptide skin patch significantly reduced both magnetic resonance imaging and clinically defined measures of disease activity and was safe and well tolerated.





The aim of antigen-specific therapy is to reduce the immune response specifically so it only removes the the disease causing cells and so has no major side-effects compared to removing large parts of the immune system. The results are pretty impressive. They took three peptides that induce EAE in mice and humans can give T cell response to these peptides. This is given as patch so they are absorbed through the skin. If there was cells responsive to peptides you may have thought you could get a skin reaction apparently not and it looks like it works.





The people in the trial had quite a high relapse rate, compared to many more recent trials and am pleasantly surprised that the skin route is a good tolerogenic route but this is some nice evidence to support an autoimmune hypothesis.





So maybe studies in mice are not that rubbish.



