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Lolium perenne peptide immunotherapy is well tolerated and elicits a protective B-cell response in seasonal allergic rhinitis patients

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Title: Lolium perenne peptide immunotherapy is well tolerated and elicits a protective B-cell response in seasonal allergic rhinitis patients
Authors: Mösges, R
Koch, AF
Raskopf, E
Singh, J
Shah-Hosseini, K
Astvatsatourov, A
Hauswald, B
Yarin, Y
Corazza, F
Haazen, L
Pirotton, S
Allekotte, S
Zadoyan, G
Legon, T
Durham, SR
Shamji, MH
Item Type: Journal Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Systemic allergic reactions are a risk for allergen immunotherapy that utilizes intact allergen preparations. We evaluated the safety, efficacy and immune mechanisms of short-course treatment with adjuvant-free Lolium perenne peptides (LPP) following a 6-week dose-escalation protocol. METHODS: In a prospective, dose-escalation study, 61 grass pollen-allergic patients received 2 subcutaneous injections of LPP once weekly for 6 weeks. Safety was assessed evaluating local reactions, systemic reactions and adverse events. The clinical effect of LPP was determined by reactivity to the conjunctival provocation test (CPT). Specific IgE, IgG4and blocking antibodies were measured at baseline (V1), during (V6) and after treatment (V8). RESULTS: No fatality, serious adverse event or epinephrine use was reported. Mean wheal diameters after injections were <0.6 cm and mean redness diameters <2.5 cm, independent of dose. Transient and mostly mild adverse events were reported in 33 patients. Two patients experienced a grade I and 4 patients a grade II reaction (AWMF classification). At V8, 69.8% of patients became nonreactive to CPT. sIgG4levels were higher at V6 (8.1-fold, P < .001) and V8 (12.2-fold, P < .001) than at V1. The sIgE:sIgG4ratio decreased at V6 (-54.6%, P < .001) and V8 (-71.6%, P < .001) compared to V1. The absolute decrease in IgE-facilitated allergen binding was 18% (P < .001) at V6 and 25% (P < .001) at V8. CONCLUSION: Increasing doses of subcutaneous LPP appeared safe, substantially diminished reactivity to CPT and induced blocking antibodies as early as 4 weeks after treatment initiation. The benefit/risk balance of LPP immunotherapy remains to be further evaluated in large studies.
Issue Date: 1-Jun-2018
Date of Acceptance: 7-Dec-2017
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/58276
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/all.13392
ISSN: 0105-4538
Publisher: Wiley
Start Page: 1254
End Page: 1262
Volume: 73
Issue: 6
Copyright Statement: © 2018 The Authors. Allergy Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution‐NonCommercial‐NoDerivs License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
Sponsor/Funder: Asit Biotech S.A.
Funder's Grant Number: ABT-hdmASIT001
Keywords: Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Allergy
Immunology
allergen
grass pollen peptides
safety
subcutaneous immunotherapy
tolerability
PLACEBO-CONTROLLED TRIAL
GRASS-POLLEN ALLERGENS
SUBCUTANEOUS IMMUNOTHERAPY
DOUBLE-BLIND
SYSTEMIC REACTIONS
PROVOCATION TEST
EXTRACT
SAFETY
RHINOCONJUNCTIVITIS
CONJUNCTIVAL
1107 Immunology
Publication Status: Published
Conference Place: Denmark
Online Publication Date: 2018-01-10
Appears in Collections:National Heart and Lung Institute