1. The impact of adverse reactions on adherence to sublingual immunotherapy for Japanese cedar pollinosis and house dust mite allergy in Japan.
- Author
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Masuno, Satoru
- Subjects
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PATIENT compliance , *BLOOD testing , *IMMUNOGLOBULINS , *PLANTS , *HOUSE dust mites , *TREATMENT duration , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ALLERGIC rhinitis , *SEASONAL variations of diseases , *RHINITIS , *SUBLINGUAL immunotherapy , *DRUGS - Abstract
Background: Allergen immunotherapy is the only treatment that can achieve remission for allergic diseases. Aims/Objectives: To investigate the three-year adherence to sublingual immunotherapy for Japanese cedar pollinosis and house dust mite allergy at a clinic in Japan and identify factors that influence adherence and severe adverse reactions. Material and Methods: In total, 174 patients aged 12 years or older who started sublingual immunotherapy for Japanese cedar pollinosis (n = 72), house dust mite allergy (n = 55), or both (n = 47) between May 2017 and June 2018. Patient age, sex, type of pharmacotherapy used, adverse reactions, blood test results, and duration of continuous treatment were investigated. Results: The three-year treatment continuation rate was 40.8%. Adverse reaction rates were 12.6% for cedar pollinosis and 40.2% for house dust mite allergy. Patients with dose reductions due to severe reactions had lower first-year continuation rates. In the MITICURE® group, patients with severe reactions had significantly higher serum total IgE levels. Severe reactions were more common in MITICURE® patients with seven or more positive antigen types. Conclusions and Significance: Severe adverse reactions reduced early adherence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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