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  • About Me

    Kelly Carter

    I was diagnosed with Celiac in 2012 and have been gluten free ever since.  I live in Atlanta with my husband and two medium sized children.  I run a blog at FatCeliac.net that covers real life issues with celiac disease, upcoming drug trials, and try to be a reliable source of information for the celiac community.


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  • Related Articles

    Jefferson Adams
    This Vaccine Could Be a Game-Changer for People with Celiac Disease
    Celiac.com 05/29/2017 - Currently, a gluten-free diet is the only way to manage celiac disease. Can a celiac vaccine change that? One company thinks so. ImmusanT corporation has developed a therapeutic vaccine, Nexvax2, that is specifically designed to treat celiac disease. The vaccine is an adjuvant-free mix of three peptides that include immunodominant epitopes for gluten-specific CD4-positive T cells. The vaccine is designed to neutralize gluten-specific CD4-positive T cells to further antigenic stimulation.
    As part of their efforts to evaluate the vaccine, a team of researchers recently set out to investigate the efficacy of epitope-specific immunotherapy targeting CD4-positive T cells in celiac disease. Specifically, they assessed the safety and pharmacodynamics of the Nexvax2 vaccine...


    Betty Wedman-St Louis, PhD, RD
    An experimental "vaccine" called Nexvax 2 is being scheduled for human clinical trials to evaluate its effectiveness in celiac disease. Immusan T is a biotechnology company focusing on developing therapeutic vaccines and received $40 million in 2017 to fund Nexvax 2 to reduce the "suffering of those with celiac disease since it is a serious inflammatory autoimmune disease caused from gluten".
    Since there is no cure for celiac disease except following a strict gluten-free diet, symptoms can vary greatly based on age and diet content. Children with DQ2 and DQ8 genes may have a swollen belly, chronic diarrhea and poor appetite which can cause delayed growth. Adults often experience abdominal pain, fatigue, anemia and joint pain. 
    When grain products- containing gluten and gliadin-...


    Jefferson Adams
    Celiac Vaccine Nexvax 2 Could Be a Big Deal for Disease Sufferers
    Celiac.com 02/20/2019 - Pharmaceutical company ImmusanT is developing a celiac disease vaccine called Nexvax 2. Many vaccines provide long-term or permanent protection against disease after just one, or several doses. Because celiac disease is not caused by a virus, like polio, but is a response to the presence of an antigen (similar to an allergen that triggers an allergy), the approach to creating a vaccine like Nexvax 2 is different and, in some ways, easier, than creating a traditional vaccine, like the HPV vaccine. Nexvax 2 is a vaccine in much the same way that allergy shots are, but not in the way the polio vaccine is.
    Celiac Vaccine is Similar to Allergy Shots
    Unlike traditional vaccines, such as the polio vaccine, or the measles vaccine, Nexvax 2 does not inject a ...


    Kelly Carter
    A Participant's Perspective on the Failure of the Nexvax2
    Celiac.com 07/09/2019 - Everyone in the Celiac community has read the press release about ImmusanT stopping the Phase 2 clinical trial of their drug Nexvax2. The drug was going to modify the immune system to ignore gluten. The hope was no more worries about cross contamination! However, in late June, ImmusanT issued a press release stating, "Nexvax2 did not provide statistically meaningful protection from gluten exposure for celiac disease patients when compared with placebo." Wait what?
    Let's go back a bit and talk about my experience in the clinical trial.
    I was in the Nexvax2 clinical trial. It consisted of five phases. The first phase was screening where they got all of your medical records that confirmed a celiac diagnosis and a gluten challenge. The gluten challenge ...


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