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Dose dependence and time course of the immunologic response to administration of standardized cat allergen extract.
- Source :
-
The Journal of allergy and clinical immunology [J Allergy Clin Immunol] 2004 Dec; Vol. 114 (6), pp. 1339-44. - Publication Year :
- 2004
-
Abstract
- Background: The immunologic response to allergen immunotherapy with 3 serial 5-fold doses of cat extract has been studied after approximately 5 weeks of immunotherapy. The highest dose containing 15 mug of Fel d 1 produced the most consistent and favorable response. It is unknown whether the comparative response on reaching a maintenance dose is maintained with long-term maintenance therapy.<br />Objective: The purpose of this investigation was to evaluate the immunologic responses with these 3 serial doses of cat hair and dander extract at baseline, after reaching the maintenance dose (approximately 5 weeks), and after 1 year of maintenance immunotherapy.<br />Methods: Twenty-eight patients with cat allergy randomized in a double-blind study were assigned to one of 4 treatment groups: placebo or cat hair and dander extract containing 0.6 mug of Fel d 1, 3 mug of Fel d 1, and 15 mug of Fel d 1 at maintenance. Studies included skin prick tests and late cutaneous reactions with cat hair and dander extract, titrated nasal challenges with the extract, serum cat allergen-specific IgG4 and IgE measurement, and flow cytometric and ELISA analysis of whole blood and intranasal cytokines (TGF-beta, IL-10, IFN-gamma, IL-4, and IL-5).<br />Results: Twenty-six subjects completed the study. After both 5 weeks and 1 year, significant and dose-dependent differences were seen with total symptom scores on nasal challenge ( P < .0001), with titrated skin prick testing with cat dander extract at 5 weeks ( P = .014) and 1 year ( P < .0001), and with cat-specific IgG4 measurement at 5 weeks ( P = .004) and 1 year ( P = .003). At 1 year, neither flow cytometry of whole blood nor ELISA evaluation of nasal cytokines demonstrated any significant differences among the treatment groups.<br />Conclusion: The response to titrated nasal allergen challenge, titrated skin prick testing, and allergen-specific IgG4 measurement to cat immunotherapy at 5 weeks is predictive of the response at 1 year.
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0091-6749
- Volume :
- 114
- Issue :
- 6
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- The Journal of allergy and clinical immunology
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 15577832
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2004.08.049