Literature DB >> 21039599

The allergen challenge chamber: a valuable tool for optimizing the clinical development of pollen immunotherapy.

P Devillier1, M Le Gall, F Horak.   

Abstract

The clinical development of allergen immunotherapy for allergic rhinoconjunctivitis because of pollen is complicated by seasonal, geographical and subject-related variability in allergen exposure. Using an allergen challenge chamber (ACC), a room that enables reproducible challenges with controlled levels of inhalant allergens for several hours, these factors can be controlled. The ACC has often been used to evaluate symptomatic medications but is underexploited in the field of allergen immunotherapy. When used in conjunction with a programme of natural-exposure trials, the ACC enables researchers to (i) facilitate the allergen immunotherapy dose-finding process, (ii) accelerate the transition from Phase I/II to Phase III trials, (iii) characterize the onset and maintenance of action, (iv) avoid the confounding effects of rescue medication, (v) better characterize the baseline or pretreatment characteristics of trial subjects, (vi) perform better-standardized physical and laboratory measurements during an acute challenge, (vii) simplify trial logistics and use smaller numbers of subjects than would be required in equivalent natural-exposure studies and (viii) support (but not replace) Phase III natural-exposure trials for the investigation into long-term and disease-modifying effects. ACC studies can further increase levels of evidence for allergen immunotherapy--the only current therapy potentially capable of modifying the underlying allergic disease.
© 2010 John Wiley & Sons A/S.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21039599     DOI: 10.1111/j.1398-9995.2010.02473.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Allergy        ISSN: 0105-4538            Impact factor:   13.146


  7 in total

1.  Risk and safety requirements for diagnostic and therapeutic procedures in allergology: World Allergy Organization Statement.

Authors:  Marek L Kowalski; Ignacio Ansotegui; Werner Aberer; Mona Al-Ahmad; Mubeccel Akdis; Barbara K Ballmer-Weber; Kirsten Beyer; Miguel Blanca; Simon Brown; Chaweewan Bunnag; Arnaldo Capriles Hulett; Mariana Castells; Hiok Hee Chng; Frederic De Blay; Motohiro Ebisawa; Stanley Fineman; David B K Golden; Tari Haahtela; Michael Kaliner; Connie Katelaris; Bee Wah Lee; Joanna Makowska; Ulrich Muller; Joaquim Mullol; John Oppenheimer; Hae-Sim Park; James Parkerson; Giovanni Passalacqua; Ruby Pawankar; Harald Renz; Franziska Rueff; Mario Sanchez-Borges; Joaquin Sastre; Glenis Scadding; Scott Sicherer; Pongsakorn Tantilipikorn; James Tracy; Vera van Kempen; Barbara Bohle; G Walter Canonica; Luis Caraballo; Maximiliano Gomez; Komei Ito; Erika Jensen-Jarolim; Mark Larche; Giovanni Melioli; Lars K Poulsen; Rudolf Valenta; Torsten Zuberbier
Journal:  World Allergy Organ J       Date:  2016-10-12       Impact factor: 4.084

Review 2.  Controlled Allergen Challenge Facilities and Their Unique Contributions to Allergic Rhinitis Research.

Authors:  Michelle L North; Mena Soliman; Terry Walker; Lisa M Steacy; Anne K Ellis
Journal:  Curr Allergy Asthma Rep       Date:  2015-04       Impact factor: 4.806

3.  Sublingual immunotherapy: World Allergy Organization position paper 2013 update.

Authors:  Giorgio Walter Canonica; Linda Cox; Ruby Pawankar; Carlos E Baena-Cagnani; Michael Blaiss; Sergio Bonini; Jean Bousquet; Moises Calderón; Enrico Compalati; Stephen R Durham; Roy Gerth van Wijk; Désirée Larenas-Linnemann; Harold Nelson; Giovanni Passalacqua; Oliver Pfaar; Nelson Rosário; Dermot Ryan; Lanny Rosenwasser; Peter Schmid-Grendelmeier; Gianenrico Senna; Erkka Valovirta; Hugo Van Bever; Pakit Vichyanond; Ulrich Wahn; Osman Yusuf
Journal:  World Allergy Organ J       Date:  2014-03-28       Impact factor: 4.084

4.  Differences in grass pollen allergen exposure across Australia.

Authors:  Paul J Beggs; Constance H Katelaris; Danielle Medek; Fay H Johnston; Pamela K Burton; Bradley Campbell; Alison K Jaggard; Don Vicendese; David M J S Bowman; Ian Godwin; Alfredo R Huete; Bircan Erbas; Brett J Green; Rewi M Newnham; Ed Newbigin; Simon G Haberle; Janet M Davies
Journal:  Aust N Z J Public Health       Date:  2015-02       Impact factor: 2.939

5.  Randomized immunotherapy trial in dual-allergic patients using "active allergen placebo" as control.

Authors:  Martin Wagenmann; Margitta Worm; Yasemin Akboga; Martin Karjalainen; Jens M Hohlfeld
Journal:  Allergy       Date:  2019-05-28       Impact factor: 13.146

6.  Fast effectiveness of a solubilized low-dose budesonide nasal spray in allergic rhinitis.

Authors:  Petra Zieglmayer; René Schmutz; Patrick Lemell; Nicole Unger-Manhart; Sabine Nakowitsch; Andreas Goessl; Markus Savli; René Zieglmayer; Eva Prieschl-Grassauer
Journal:  Clin Exp Allergy       Date:  2020-07-07       Impact factor: 5.018

7.  A birch sublingual allergy immunotherapy tablet reduces rhinoconjunctivitis symptoms when exposed to birch and oak and induces IgG4 to allergens from all trees in the birch homologous group.

Authors:  Peter Couroux; Henrik Ipsen; Brian Sonne Stage; Jakob Thomas Damkjaer; Maria Abildgaard Steffensen; Anne Marie Salapatek; Kaare Lund; Peter Adler Würtzen
Journal:  Allergy       Date:  2018-11-22       Impact factor: 13.146

  7 in total

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