A New Hope for People with Peanut Allergies: St Vincentās Leads Life-Changing Trial
Lucy Jones, a well-known baker from Sydneyās Northern Beaches, is taking part in a global medical breakthrough at St Vincentāsāby participating in a world-first clinical trial aimed at revolutionising peanut allergy treatment.
The trial at St Vincentās Hospital Sydney, is part of a Phase 1 study testing the safety of a new injectable therapy. The treatment is designed to offer fast, long-lasting protection against peanut allergiesāpotentially with just a single injection.
āBeing part of this phase one trial with a novel mechanism of action, and trying to prove safety to give our patients more options is really exciting for usā says Dr Winnie Tong, a Clinical Researcher part of the team. āThe defining thing I learned from my time at St Vincentāsāand also as a medical studentāis that good clinical research is fundamental to improving treatment options and care for patients.ā
Good clinical research is fundamental to improving treatment options and care for patients.
Dr Winnie Tong


For people living with severe allergies, the impact goes far beyond avoiding certain foods. Dr Jaqueline Loprete, a lead Clinical Investigator involved in the trial, explains:
āIt actually impacts more of your life than just simply avoiding that dish on the menu. It plays a lot into how you decide to socialise, and move about in the world. Youāve got a constant level of anxiety that is underlying everything that you do. And it has significant psychosocial impacts on patients. So we need to give them something so much better than saying āavoid what you can and carry your EpiPenā… Itās more about how they can move about in the world in a freer manner and with less anxiety that I think is going to be the really exciting thing when it comes to allergy research.ā
The trial is a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled studyāthe gold standard in clinical research.
āMost people like to eat, right?ā says Dr Andrew Carr, a lead investigator on the study. āAnd we all like to eat without having to think. We want it to be an enjoyable experience, not a scary one. And hopefully this will be one thing that might change it for some people.ā
Through this trial and countless others, our teams at St Vincentās remain focused on what matters most: giving patients safer, more empowering options. And thanks to participants like Lucy Jones, that future may be closer than ever.
Learn more about Lucyās story, the trial and its impact on patient outcomes: