| Literature DB >> 27134696 |
Tatiana A Slavyanakaya1, Vladislava V Derkach2, Revaz I Sepiashvili1.
Abstract
Allergen specific immunotherapy (AIT) has been the only pathogenetically relevant treatment of IgE-mediated allergic diseases (ADs) for many years. The use of AIT for atopic dermatitis (AD) treatment is dubious and has both followers and opponents. The improvement of subcutaneous AIT (SCIT) and introduction of Sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) gives prospects of their application both for adults and children suffering from AD. This review presents results of scientific research, system and meta-analyses that confirm the clinical efficacy of AIT for children with AD who has the sensitization to allergens of house dust mite, grass and plant pollen suffering from co-occurring respiratory ADs and with moderate and severe course of allergic AD. There have been analyzed the most advanced achievements in AIT studies as well as there have been specified the unmet needs in AD. The preliminary diagnostics of IgE-mediated AD and pathophysiological disorders, including immune ones, will allow a doctor to develop appropriate comprehensive treatment algorithm for children's AD aimed at its correction. The including of AIT to the children's comprehensive therapy program is reasonable only if AD has the allergic form. It is necessary better to design the randomized research studies and to acquire extended clinical practice in children with AD. Use of the successes of molecular-based allergy diagnostics will help to optimize and personalize the process of selecting the necessary allergens to determine the most appropriate vaccines for children considering the results of the allergen component diagnostics. The strategy of treatment of children with AD in future will be based on individual target therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Aeroallergen; Allergen specific immunotherapy; Atopic dermatitis; Children; Clinical efficacy; Subcutaneous specific immunotherapy; Sublingual specific immunotherapy
Year: 2016 PMID: 27134696 PMCID: PMC4836162 DOI: 10.1186/s40413-016-0106-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World Allergy Organ J ISSN: 1939-4551 Impact factor: 4.084
Clinical studies of SCIT/SLIT efficacy in AD
| Authors | Year of research | Country | Study design | The number of patients (treatment/control) | Category of the patients (Age) | The type of allergen | Route of administration | The total duration of the study (in months) | Clinical efficacy (the opinion of the Clinician -C/patient-P) Treatment/control (in %) | Reference number |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kaufman H.S., Roth H.L. | 1974 | US | qRCT DB PC | 52 (26/26) | children/adults (2–47) | animal dander, HDM molds, pollen | SCIT | 24 | C(+) | 45 |
| 81,3/40 | ||||||||||
| Warner J.O. et al. | 1978 | UK | RCT DB PC | 20 (9/11) | children (5–14) | HDM | SCIT | 12 | P(+) | 92 |
| 77,8/27,3 | ||||||||||
| Ring J. | 1982 | Germany | RCT DB PC | 2 (1/1) | children (10) | Grass pollen | SCIT | 24 | C(+) | 71 |
| SCORAD improvement from score 30→10/26→21 | ||||||||||
| Glover M.T., Atherton D.J. | 1992 | UK | RCT DB PC | 24 (13/11) | children (5–16) | HDM | SCIT | 8 -13,5 | P(+) | 39 |
| 61,5/81,8 | ||||||||||
| Galli E. et al. | 1994 | Italy | RCT DB PC | 60 (NM) | children (0,5-12) | HDM | SCIT | Till 36 (mean duration 18.7) | C(+) | 38 |
| Group A (AD+AR/BA)/Group B&Group C (AD) Improvement of skin lesions: 81/63/61 | ||||||||||
| Silny M., Czarnecka- Operacz W. | 2006 | Poland | RCT DB PC | 20 (10/10) | children/adults (5–40) | dander, HDM pollen (adsorbed with aluminum hydroxide) | SCIT | 12 | C(+) | 76 |
| 80/10 on the base of W-АЗС index, specific IgE (р<0,001) | ||||||||||
| Silny W. et al. | 2005 | Poland | CT | 68 (36- HDM+ 12-Pollen/20-BT***) | children/teenagers | HDM Pollen | SCIT | 36 | C(+) | 73-75 |
| Significant clinical efficacy W-АЗС index > BT (р <0,001) | ||||||||||
| Czarnecka- Operacz M, Silny W. | 2006 | Poland | NM | 66 | NM (subgroup with different age) | HDM/grass pollen/grass + mugwort pollen | SCIT | 48 | C(+) | 25 |
| Significant clinical efficacy with IgE-mediated airborne allergy | ||||||||||
| 37(14/17/6)/ | ||||||||||
| Bussmann C. et al. | 2006 (2007) | Germany | pilot study (systematic overview) | 25 | NM | HDM | SCIT | 4 | C(+) | 13,14 |
| SCORAD, specific IgE, IgG4, IL-10 | ||||||||||
| Slavyanskaya T. et al., | 2013-2015 | Russia | CT | 350 | children/teenagers (3–18) | HDM | SCIT | ≥36 | C(+) | 29-35, 77,78, 80-83 |
| Derkach V. et al. | 300/50 (moderate-severe AD) | QOL (scores) 11.32→ in 3 times decreased (р<0,001), SCORAD | ||||||||
| 42,57→5,19, specific IgE, IL-4, IL-10 |
Note: SCIT subcutaneous immunotherapy, SLIT sublingual immunotherapy, AD atopic dermatitis, AR allergic rhinitis, BA allergic bronchial asthma, HDM house-dust mite, qRCT quasi-randomized controlled trial, RCT DB PC randomized controlled trial double-blind placebo-controlled, CT clinical trial, NM not mentioned, SCORAD severity scoring of atopic dermatitis, QOL quality of life, C (+) presence, by clinician, P (+) presence, by patient
Summary characteristics of the clinical efficacy of SLIT in AD
| Authors | Year of research | Country | Study design | The number of patients (treatment/control) | Category of the patients (Age) | The type of allergen | Route of administration | The total duration of the study (in months) | Clinical efficacy (the opinion of the Clinician -C/patient-P) Treatment/control (in %) | Reference number |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Petrova S.I. et al. | 2006 | Russia | RCT DB PC | 99 (28-SLIT/39-placebo/32-BT) | teenagers/adult | HDM | SLIT | NM | C(+) | 68 |
| Improvement in the SLIT group | ||||||||||
| Pajno G.B. et al. | 2007 | Italy | RCT DB PC | 56 (28/28) | children (5–16) | HDM | SLIT | 18 | C(+) | 60 |
| Improvement in mild-moderate forms after 9 months of treatment. SCORAD was significant (P = .025) | ||||||||||
| Di Rienzo V. et al. | 2014 | Italy | Multicentric RCT open, parallel-group study | NM | children (5–18) | HDM | SLIT | 18 | C(+) | 36 |
| Effectively in children with AD | ||||||||||
| Qin Y.E. et al. | 2014 | Chinese | RCT DB PC | 107 (58/49) | NM | HDM | SLIT | 12 | C(+) | 70 |
| 77.78/53.85 (P < 0.05) | ||||||||||
| Cadario G. et al. | 2007 | Italy | pilot study | 86 (53 females and 33 males) | children/adults (3–60) | HDM | SLIT | 12 | C(+) | 16 |
| SCORAD Improvement from score 43,3→23,7 Reduces the SCORAD |
Note: SLIT sublingual immunotherapy, AD atopic dermatitis, AR allergic rhinitis, HDM house-dust mite, RCT DB PC randomized controlled trial double-blind placebo-controlled, CT clinical trial, NM not mentioned, SCORAD severity scoring of atopic dermatitis, C (+) presence, by clinician
Comparative effectiveness of different methods of AIT in AD in children (SLIT vs SCIT)
| CLINICAL EFFICACY | AIT (route of administration) | |
|---|---|---|
| SCIT | SLIT | |
| WHAT IS KNOWN? | (+) in Ig-E mediated AD | (+) in Ig-E mediated AD |
| (+) in AD in combination with respiratory allergies (AR and BA) | (+) in AD in combination with respiratory allergies (AR and BA) | |
| (+) to mono aeroallergens (HDM, pollen of grass and plants) | (+) to mono aeroallergens (HDM, pollen of grass and plants) | |
| (+) to a mixture of aeroallergens (HDM, pollen of grass and plants) | (−) | |
| Have been identified effective and ineffective doses for many allergens | Have been identified the appropriate dosages for SLIT tablets for aeroallergens (allergens of grass, ragweed and house dust mites) | |
| Possibly greater efficacy (at least first year) | (−) | |
| Effective when using a mixture of multiple aeroallergens | (−) to a mixture of aeroallergens (HDM, pollen of grass and plants) | |
| The main duration of therapy is 3–5 years | The optimal duration of therapy is 3-4 years | |
| Prevention of new sensitization and progression of respiratory allergies (AR and allergic BA) | Prevention of new sensitization and progression of allergic BA | |
| Lasting effect after termination of treatment | Lasting effect after termination of treatment | |
| May cause local and systemic reactions | Improved safety compared to SCIT (mostly, temporary local reactions) | |
| More systemic reactions | ||
| Inconvenient in use (requires special conditions: a trained expert, equipped rooms and conducting in outpatient conditions, patient’s observation) | More convenient in use compared to SCIT (can be applied at home) | |
| WHAT REMAINS UNANSWERED? | The comparative efficacy compared to SLIT | The comparative efficacy compared to SCIT. Possibly less effective (at least first year) |
| Possibly more effective (at least first year) | ||
| Optimal dosing of SLIT in drops Optimal dosing regimens are defined only for grass, ragweed and HDM tablets | ||
| The possibility of using mixtures of multiple unrelated allergens | ||
| Multiple allergen mixes can be less effective. | ||
Note: AIT allergen specific immunotherapy, SCIT subcutaneous immunotherapy, SLIT sublingual immunotherapy, AD atopic dermatitis, AR allergic rhinitis, BA allergic bronchial asthma, HDM house-dust mite, (+) clinical efficacy, (−) clinically ineffective or poorly understood