| Literature DB >> 25709745 |
Uyenphuong H Le1, A Wesley Burks1.
Abstract
IgE-mediated food allergy is a potentially life-threatening allergic disease with an increase in prevalence in developed countries over the past 15 years. Currently, there are no approved forms of therapy and the standard of care is dietary restriction and ready access to emergency medications, such as self-injectable epinephrine and antihistamines. Allergen-specific modalities of treatment currently being studied include oral immunotherapy (OIT) and sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT). Both forms demonstrate the ability to desensitize patients to a variety of specific food allergens and show great promise. However, more research is needed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of OIT and SLIT prior to routine use in clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Desensitization; Food allergy; Oral immunotherapy; Sublingual immunotherapy; Tolerance
Year: 2014 PMID: 25709745 PMCID: PMC4325942 DOI: 10.1186/1939-4551-7-35
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World Allergy Organ J ISSN: 1939-4551 Impact factor: 4.084
Summary of selected studies reviewed
| Study | Subjects | Age of subjects | Baseline OFC | Goal maintenance dose & duration of IT | Clinical outcome/Desensitization n (%) | Drop outs | Tolerance n (%) | Immunologic changes | Safety data |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| N = 55 | 5-11 yrs. | No | Dose = 2000 mg | 30 (75%) passed 10 g OFC and desensitized at 22 mos. of OIT | 8 | 11 (28%) at 23 mos. – off 4-6 wks. | ↑egg white-specific IgG4; ↓egg white-specific IgE and basophil activation | No severe adverse events. 78% of active OIT children had oral or pharyngeal AEs vs. 20% in placebo group |
| Duration = 22 mos. | |||||||||
|
| N = 28 | 1-16 yrs. | No | Dose = 4000 mg | 16 (84%) passed 5 g OFC | 3 | Not assessed | No change in IgE; ↑IgG4 and peanut-specific FoxP3 Tregs; ↓IL-5 and IL-13; ↓skin prick tests | Initial escalation: 9 (47%) of 19 OIT subjects had AEs with 2 requiring epinephrine |
| Duration = 48 wks. | Build-up doses: OIT subjects experienced AEs with 1.2% of 407 doses, no epinephrine required | ||||||||
|
| N = 39 | 1-16 yrs. | No | Initial pilot OIT trial: Dose = 300 mg | Initial pilot OIT trial: 27 (93%) of 29 passed 3.9 g OFC and considered desensitized | 15 | Continued OIT trial: 12 (50%) of 24 achieved sustained unresponsiveness (treatment successes) – off 4 weeks | ↓skin prick tests, ↓peanut, Ara h 1, & Ara h 2 IgE, ↓peanut IgE/total IgE ratio, no change in peanut IgG4 or functional activity | Initial pilot OIT trial: 92% with AE during 1-day dose escalation; 46% of build-up doses elicited symptoms |
| Duration = 8 mos. | |||||||||
| Continued OIT trial: Dose = 4000 mg | Continued OIT trial: 24 (100%) of 24 passed 5 g desensitization OFC | Continued OIT trial: No AEs reported by treatment successes with peanut exposure vs. 3 (14%) of treatment failures reported mild reactions | |||||||
| Duration = 5 yrs. | |||||||||
|
| N = 40 | 12-37 yrs. | Yes | Dose = 165-1386 mcg | 14 (70%) in active group vs. 3 (15%) in placebo group were responders | 10 | Not assessed | No change in peanut-specific IgE; ↑IgG4 | First phase: AEs with 40.1% of 5825 peanut SLIT doses including 1 treated with epinephrine vs. 0.6% of 6029 placebo doses |
| Dose for cross-over group = 3696 mcg | Crossover High dose group: 33.3% of 5030 doses had AEs | ||||||||
| Duration = 44 wks. | |||||||||
|
| N = 30 | 6-17 yrs. | Yes | SLIT dose =7 mg | 1 (10%) SLIT | 2 | 1 SLIT and 8 combined OIT subjects deemed tolerant | ↑cow’s milk-specific IgG4 in all groups; ↓specific-IgE and basophil response in combined OIT | Symptoms with 1802 (29%) of 6246 SLIT doses and 2402 (23%) of 10,645 OIT doses. OIT had significantly more multisystem, upper respiratory tract, gastro-intestinal, lower respiratory tract symptoms, more need for B-agonist and antihistamines. Epinephrine 2× in SLIT and 4× in OIT. |
| OITB dose =1000 mg | 6 (60%) SLIT/OITB | ||||||||
| OITA dose =2000 mg | 8 (80%) SLIT/OITA passed 8 g OFC | ||||||||
| SLIT duration = 74 wks. | |||||||||
| OIT duration = 86 wks. |