deltatrials
Not Yet Recruiting OBSERVATIONAL NCT06876506

Identification of B Regulatory Cells by Flow Cytometry

Identification and Quantitation of Human B Regulatory Cells Via Flow Cytometry and Their Potential Role as a Treatment Efficacy Biomarker in Allergen-specific Immunotherapy

Sponsor: Health Education England, Wessex

Updated 3 times since 2025 Last updated: Dec 4, 2025 Started: Feb 1, 2026 Primary completion: Apr 28, 2027 Completion: Jul 31, 2027
This information is for research purposes only and is not medical advice. Consult a healthcare provider before making any medical decision.

Listed as NCT06876506, this observational or N/A phase trial focuses on Pollen Allergy and Venom Allergy and remains actively recruiting participants. Sponsored by Health Education England, Wessex, it has been updated 3 times since 2026, reflecting limited change activity. This study adds to the evidence base for this therapeutic area through structured, versioned documentation.

Study Description(click to expand)

Allergen immunotherapy (AIT) is a disease-modifying treatment for allergic disease which promotes immune system tolerance, i.e. reduces clinical manifestations of allergy and is the only known effective treatment to prevent anaphylaxis in patients who have previously had serious reactions to insect venoms. AIT induces a variety of immune system changes to facilitate this process, one mechanism of which is the production of a population of white blood cells called B-regulatory cells (BREGs). These cells release a chemical called interleukin-10 (IL-10) which inhibits (controls) the allergic immune response. The success of AIT is difficult to establish/monitor during treatment. Often treatment success can only be established at the end of a long treatment period (typically 3 years) and currently clinicians rely on patient symptoms upon re-exposure to further allergen post-treatment. Therefore there is a requirement to identify a marker (biomarker) which can be tested for during treatment to help clinicians establish at an earlier time, if the AIT is showing success or if a change to treatment is required. This research will measure the BREG and IL-10 production in patients before and at multiple points during AIT, to establish if there is a relationship between the BREG/IL-10 concentration and the success or...

Allergen immunotherapy (AIT) is a disease-modifying treatment for allergic disease which promotes immune system tolerance, i.e. reduces clinical manifestations of allergy and is the only known effective treatment to prevent anaphylaxis in patients who have previously had serious reactions to insect venoms. AIT induces a variety of immune system changes to facilitate this process, one mechanism of which is the production of a population of white blood cells called B-regulatory cells (BREGs). These cells release a chemical called interleukin-10 (IL-10) which inhibits (controls) the allergic immune response. The success of AIT is difficult to establish/monitor during treatment. Often treatment success can only be established at the end of a long treatment period (typically 3 years) and currently clinicians rely on patient symptoms upon re-exposure to further allergen post-treatment. Therefore there is a requirement to identify a marker (biomarker) which can be tested for during treatment to help clinicians establish at an earlier time, if the AIT is showing success or if a change to treatment is required. This research will measure the BREG and IL-10 production in patients before and at multiple points during AIT, to establish if there is a relationship between the BREG/IL-10 concentration and the success or failure of AIT in controlling patient symptoms of allergy. The hope is that BREG measurement could be used in the future as a biomarker for AIT efficacy, and therefore provide evidence of AIT success sooner than current protocols, or establishing failure of AIT and therefore expediting a change in treatment. The latter will likely result in saving time in pursuing a treatment which is not working, but also for understanding when the treatment has already reached optimal effectiveness and can be stopped.

Overall Aim:

To develop a flow cytometry assay for the identification and quantitation of human B regulatory cells to allow evaluation of their potential role as a treatment efficacy biomarker in allergen-specific immunotherapy.

Primary Objectives:

1. Identification of a biomarker that defines success of allergen immunotherapy 2. Development of a novel flow cytometry assay to detect and quantify B-regulatory cells in whole blood/peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) isolate 3. Determine the reference intervals for BREG cell quantitation in the test and control groups using conventional parametric or non-parametric measures, depending on the characteristics of the data obtained

Secondary Objectives:

1. Evaluation of the performance of the flow cytometry methods as per usual laboratory protocol 2. Comparison of BREG cell quantitation in the control group verses the test group, and the test group at baseline verses on AIT 3. Comparison of BREG cell quantitation in patients receiving subcutaneous and sublingual AIT 4. Comparison of allergen-specific blocking antibodies (allergen-specific IgG4) in the test group at baseline and in those on AIT 5. Assess correlation of allergen-specific blocking antibody quantitation with changes in whole blood B regulatory cell concentrations

Status Flow

~Apr 2025 – ~Jun 2025 · 2 months · monthly snapshotNot Yet Recruiting~Jun 2025 – ~Jan 2026 · 7 months · monthly snapshotNot Yet Recruiting~Jan 2026 – present · 3 months · monthly snapshotNot Yet Recruiting

Change History

3 versions recorded
  1. Jan 2026 — Present [monthly]

    Not Yet Recruiting

  2. Jun 2025 — Jan 2026 [monthly]

    Not Yet Recruiting

  3. Apr 2025 — Jun 2025 [monthly]

    Not Yet Recruiting

    First recorded

Eligibility Summary

No eligibility information available.

Contact Information

Sponsor contact:
  • Health Education England, Wessex
  • Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust
  • University of Manchester
Data source: Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust

For direct contact, visit the study record on ClinicalTrials.gov .

Study Locations