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. 2025 Feb 24;5(1):ltaf005.
doi: 10.1093/immadv/ltaf005. eCollection 2025.

Lung immune challenge study protocol: controlled exposure to inhaled resiquimod (R848) to study mechanisms of inflammation

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Lung immune challenge study protocol: controlled exposure to inhaled resiquimod (R848) to study mechanisms of inflammation

Akhilesh Jha et al. Immunother Adv. .

Abstract

This study aims to develop a human lung immune challenge model using inhaled Resiquimod (R848), a Toll-like receptor 7/8 agonist, to investigate inflammatory mechanisms involved in the human respiratory mucosa in health and disease. This approach seeks to induce innate immune anti-viral responses in the lungs and blood, with a suitable dose of inhaled R848 that is clinically tolerable. The study will include healthy volunteers and individuals with asthma. The primary outcome is a change in CXCL10, a biomarker representative of anti-viral responses, at 24 hours post-exposure. Secondary outcomes include changes in lung function, physiological parameters, and inflammatory markers, including C-reactive protein and eosinophil counts. This trial involves a single ascending dose, randomized, single-blind, placebo-controlled design. Participants will receive R848 via nebulization in escalating doses from 0.1 to 100 µg/ml or saline placebo. Safety assessments include spirometry, vital signs, and blood samples to monitor systemic and lung-specific immune responses. The study will contribute to understanding immune pathways in asthma and provide a platform for testing novel anti-inflammatory therapeutics. The protocol has been approved by relevant ethics committees and will be disseminated via peer-reviewed publications and open-access data repositories.

Keywords: asthma; human challenge; immunology; innate immunity; mucosal immunology; respiratory medicine.

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Conflict of interest statement

A.J. declares a consultancy agreement with GSK and speaker fees from Sanofi. The remaining authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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