1. Nasal allergen‐neutralizing antibodies correlate closely with tolerated intranasal allergen challenge dose following grass pollen subcutaneous immunotherapy in patients with local allergic rhinitis.
- Author
-
Eguiluz‐Gracia, Ibon, Parkin, Rebecca V., Layhadi, Janice A., Palmer, Elizabeth, Meng, Xun, Zhu, Rongfei, Sahiner, Umit, Durham, Stephen R., Torres, Maria Jose, Mayorga, Cristobalina, Rondon, Carmen, and Shamji, Mohamed H.
- Subjects
- *
ALLERGY desensitization , *ALLERGIC rhinitis , *B cells , *ALLERGENS , *POLLEN - Abstract
Background: Local allergic rhinitis (LAR) is defined by chronic nasal symptoms, absence of atopy, positive nasal allergen challenge (NAC) and a good response to subcutaneous allergen immunotherapy (SCIT). We sought to investigate SCIT capacity to induce local and systemic blocking antibodies in LAR patients. Methods: A RDBPC study of grass SCIT was performed, with participants receiving either SCIT (Group A; n = 10) or placebo (Group B; n = 14) in the first 6 months. Both groups subsequently received SCIT for 12 months at Year 2. Nasal and serum antibodies (IgG4, IgA1 and IgA2) and their inhibitory capacity were measured at multiple timepoints. Results: The allergen concentration tolerated increased significantly at 6 months (Group A; p =.047) and 24 months (Group B; p =.049) compared with baseline and persisted until the end of the study. Induction of serum sIgA1 to Phl p was seen in Groups A and B, albeit the former being induced earlier (1.71‐fold, p =.027). A significant induction in sIgG4 to Phl p 1 and 5 was observed in serum of Group A (p =.047 and p =.0039) and sIgA2 to Phl p in Group B (p =.032 and p =.0098) at 18 and 24 months, respectively. Both local and systemic blocking antibodies can inhibit allergen–IgE complexes binding to CD23 on B cells, and this correlated with level of allergen tolerated intra‐nasally in Group A (serum; 휌 = −.47, p =.0006, nasal; 휌 = −.38, p =.0294). Conclusions: Grass pollen SCIT induced functional systemic blocking antibodies that correlate with the concentration of allergen tolerated following NAC, highlighting their potential as a biomarker of SCIT in LAR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF