| Literature DB >> 27313458 |
Abstract
Due to differences between allergen immunotherapy (AIT) trials in patient populations, trial design (including primary efficacy variables), the definition of a pollen season, data analysis, and comparisons between AIT products with existing data, is not possible nor valid. The efficacy of two grass pollen AIT tablets, Oralair(®) and Grazax(®)/Grastek(®), should not be compared by looking at the percentage of score improvement in their respective trials. However, the evidence available concerning the efficacy and safety in trials can be compared by paying close attention to the scientific quality of the trials, details in the administration schedules, and safety issues. It can be concluded due to the high level of evidence available, that Oralair(®) is effective in a pre (2-months)-coseasonal schedule to reduce symptoms and medication use, and improve a patients' quality of life during the treatment season. For the long-term, where the quality of efficacy evidence is moderate at 2-year posttreatment due to a high dropout rate, the pre (4-months)-coseasonal schedule should be used. No clinical efficacy data exists for starting treatment in-season, but the clinical onset of action of Oralair(®) is detectable after only 1 month of treatment. In the pivotal trials in Europe and the USA, no tablet-related epinephrine was needed, though some rare severe local reactions have been reported. Research for Grazax(®)/Grastek(®) showed that the long-term efficacy needs a continuous 3-year administration (moderate-low quality evidence available), and in two patients, tablet-related epinephrine was given. Further details on the comparative efficacy of both tablets would only be possible if both were evaluated in the same, adequately powered trial.Entities:
Keywords: allergic conjunctivitis; allergic rhinitis; grass pollen; sublingual allergen immunotherapy; tablet allergen immunotherapy
Year: 2016 PMID: 27313458 PMCID: PMC4892828 DOI: 10.2147/TCRM.S70363
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Clin Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6336 Impact factor: 2.423
Quality of evidence (according to the GRADE approach) of SLIT studies on Oralair®, and several pivotal trials with other grass pollen formulations
| Author, year study details | Design (starting score) | Large effect | Confound annulated | Dose–response gradient | Total (+) | Limitations in design/execution | Inconsistency of results | Indirectness of evidence | Imprecision of results | Publication bias | Total (−) | Quality of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DBPC (4) | X | X | Yes | +1 | Symptom score alone is the primary outcome variable | X | X | X | X | −1 | 4, high | |
| DBPC (4) | X | Novel adjusted symptom score previously validated | Trend to more improvement compared to placebo year by year (NS) | +1.5 | ITT but data of 59 pts not apt for inclusion, −1 | X | No medication score (primary outcome −novel symptom score adjusted for medication intake) | X | X | −1 | 3–4, moderate–high | |
| DBPC (4) | X | X | X | 0 | Dropout rate >15% | Reduction in days with rescue med in 300IR but not in 500IR | X | X | X | −1 | 3, moderate | |
| DBPC (4) | X | Large symptom reduction in placebo (more severe pts withdrew), even so statistically significant improvement in SLIT grps | X | +1 | Post hoc calculation of combined symptom–medication score, but enough power to do so Dropout since start of study: AIT 41%, placebo 39% | X | X | X | X | −2 | 3, moderate | |
| DBPC (4) | X | X | X | 0 | X | X | X | X | X | 0 | 4, high | |
| DBPC (4) | +1 | X | X | +1 | No description of dropouts | X | X | Large CI | X | −2 | 3, moderate | |
| DBPC (4) | 4 m: +1 | X | Trend for dose–effect over time | +1 | Blinding and randomization technique not explained | No change in nasal airflow and nasal secretion weight | X | X | X | −2 | 3, moderate | |
| DBPC (4) | X | X | X | 0 | X | X | X | X | X | 0 | 4, high | |
| DBPC (4) | X | X | Yes | +1 | X (GOOD: ITT analysis) | X | X | Differences vs placebo and trends calculated, not between dosing grps | X | −1 | 4, high | |
| DBPC (4) | X | X | X | 0 | Originally plannedas 1 yr trial. Only 60%/51% of original AIT/placebo continued. NS difference insymptom–medication scores between continuing/stop: −0.5 | X | X | X | X | −0.5 | 3–4, moderate–high | |
| DBPC (4) | X | X | X | 0 | Same as earlier: −0.5+ dropout rate sincestudy extension: 18.6% AIT and 36%placebo: −1 | X | X | X | X | −1.5 | 2–3, low–moderate | |
| DBPC (4) | X | X | Yes | +1 | X | X | X | Small grps | X | −1 | 4, high | |
| DBPC (4) Rhinitis | X | X | X | 0 | X | X | X | X | X | 0 | 4, high | |
| Precoseason, 15 μg Phl p 5 tablet/d | DBPC (4) Asthma | X | X | X | 0 | X | X | Only symptom + medication | Very small numbers (9 vs 3 days) | X | −2 | 2, low |
| DBPC (4) | X | X | X | 0 | X(GOOD: ITTanalysis) | X | X | X | X | 0 | 4, high | |
| DBPC (4) | X | X | X | 0 | X | X | X | X | X | 0 | 4, high | |
| DBPC (4) | X | X | X | 0 | X (GOOD: ITTanalysis) | X | X | X | X | 0 | 4, high | |
| DBPC (4) | X | X | X | 0 | No clear description randomization | X | X | Non-validated VAS scoring for symptoms | Medication scores 1st and 2nd year not stated | −2.5 | 1–2, (very) low | |
| DBPC (4) | X | Small grps and even so statistically significant difference | X | +1 | Randomizationmethod notdescribed, −1 | X | X | Small grps | X | −2 | 3, moderate | |
| DBPC (4) | X | X | X | 0 | No ITT mentioned, −1. 16.5% dropout in active grp, −,20% | X | X | (change in lung symptoms not reported) | X | −1 (for RC) | 3 (for RC) | |
| DBPC (4) | X | X | X | 0 | (preestablished adjusted to 1,000 pollen grains/m3 of symptom and medication scores: no reduction) | X | X | Small grps, underpowered | X | −1 | 3, moderate | |
| Randomized, noncontrolled (4) | X | X | Year-by-year improvement in symptons and medications, +1 | +1 | No control grp, small grps: only statistically significant difference pre-post Tx, not between both active grps; no description dropout per grp | X | Post hoc fusion of grps to improve stats, but does not seem to affect outcomes; −0.5 | X | Incorrect conclusion: medication score in supra-lingual not improved | SLIT −2.5; supra-lingual −3.5 | SLIT: 2.5 supra-lingual 1.5 | |
| DBPC (4) | X | X | X | 0 | Methods of randomization nor blinding described: −1 Statistically significant difference grps at baseline: −1 | X | X | Median scores not mean | X | −3 | 1, very low | |
| Randomized controlled (4) | X | Small grps, even so statistically significant | X | +1 | No medication score | X | VAS “well-being” only once a year: −2 | X | X | −3 | 2, low | |
| Randomized controlled (4) | X | X | X | 0 | Very small grps. No comparison of symptom–medication reduction SLIT vs placebo | Much more adverse effects in placebo grp | Incomplete nasal symptom score (no congestion measured) | No SD nor CI given for symptom nor medication | X | −4 | 0, very low | |
| DBPC | X | X | +1 | +1 | X | X | X | X | X | 0 | 4+, high | |
| DBPC | X | X | X | 0 | X | X | X | X | X | 0 | 4, high | |
| DBPC | X | X | X | 0 | X | X | X | X | X | 0 | 4, high | |
| DBPC | X | X | +1, progressive improvement over the 3 yrs | +1 | −1, no clear primary end-point, no comparison A vs P | X | X | −1, | X | −2 | 3, moderate | |
| DBPC | X | X | X | 0 | −1, small grps | X | X | X | X | −1 | 3, moderate | |
Notes:
All plausible confounding variables may be working to reduce the demonstrated effect, or increase the effect if no effect was observed.
RR − relative risk. Large effect RR <0.5, very large effect RR <0.2. RR has been calculated from the data given in the articles.
Same study as Wahn 2009.16
Abbreviations: A, active; P, placebo; PAR, perennial allergic rhinitis; pt, patient; SAR, seasonal allergic rhinitis; SLIT, sublingual immunotherapy; DBPC, double-blind, placebo-controlled; SPT, skin prick test; yrs, years; m, months; FAS, full analysis set; vs, versus; GRADE, Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation; AIT, allergen immunotherapy; NS, not significant; ITT, intention to treat; Med, medication; AR, allergic rhinitis; CI, confidence interval; ARC, allergi rhinoconjunctivitis; SQ-T, standard quality tablets; VAS, visual analog scale; Post-Tx, post treatment; GINA, Global Initiative on Asthma; RC, rhinoconjunctivitis; Nr, number; SD, standard deviation; SQ-U’ standard quality unit; Grp, group; WAO, world allergy organization.
Number and quality according to GRADE of the double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trials of SC-AIT in patients with SAR included in the Cochrane meta-analysis 2007
| Author | Year | Country | ITx | Plac | Quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alvarez-Cuesta | 2005 | Spain | 25 | 28 | 3, moderate |
| Ariano | 1999 | Italy | 13 | 12 | 2, low |
| Armentia-Medina | 1989 | Spain | 19 | 11 | |
| Arvidsson | 2002 | Sweden | 24 | 25 | 3, moderate |
| Balda | 1998 | Germany | 51 | 60 | 2, low |
| Bodtger | 2002 | Denmark | 17 | 18 | 3–4, moderate–high |
| Bousquet | 1987a | Germany/France | 15 | 19 | |
| Bousquet | 1987b | France | 39 | 20 | |
| Bousquet | 1988 | Germany/France | 15 | 10 | |
| Bousquet | 1989 | Germany/France | 13/15/18 | 14 | |
| Bousquet | 1990 | France | 20/19 | 18 | |
| Bousquet | 1991 | Germany/France | 18/17 | 18 | |
| Brewxzynski | 1999 | Germany | 10 | 10 | |
| Brunet | 1992 | Canada | 13 | 14 | |
| Corrigan | 2005 | UK/Germany | 77 | 77 | 2–3, low–moderate |
| Drachenberg | 2001 | German/Austria | 74 | 50 | 4, high |
| Drachenberg | 2002 | Germany | 54 | 27 | Not scored |
| Ferrer | 2005 | Spain | 28 | 29 | 3, moderate |
| Fling | 1989 | USA | 12 | 7 | |
| Grammer | 1982 | USA | 21 | 19 | |
| Grammer | 1983 | USA | 13 | 13 | |
| Grammer | 1984 | USA | 21 | 21 | |
| Grammer | 1984 | USA | 19 | 31 | |
| Grammer | 1986 | USA | 15, 4, 1 | 20 | |
| Grammer | 1987 | USA | 36 | 37 | |
| Iliopoulos | 1991 | USA | 21 | 20 | |
| Jutel | 2005 | Poland/Germany | 29 | 28 | 2, low |
| Karmaker | 1994 | India | 86 | 19 | |
| Lee | 1982 | USA | 48 | 28 | |
| Litwin | 1991 | USA | 20 | 19 | |
| Meriney | 1986 | USA | 10 | 10 | |
| Metzger | 1981 | USA/England | 50 | 50 | |
| Mirone | 2004 | Italy | 16 | 16 | 1–2, very low |
| Norman | 1982 | USA | 10 | 10 | |
| Ortolani | 1984 | Italy/USA | 8 | 7 | |
| Ortolani | 1994 | Italy | 18 | 17 | |
| Paraskevopoulos | 2005 | UK | 12 | 6 | |
| Pastorello | 1992 | Italy/Germany | 10 | 9 | |
| Tari | 1997 | Italy/Germany | 20 | 20 | 2, low |
| Varney | 1991 | UK | 21 | 19 | |
| Zenner | 1997 | Germany | 45 | 42 | 4, high |
Notes:
Studies used for the symptom score of Cochrane meta-analysis 2007.1
GRADE score is the scoring of quality of evidence according to GRADE as reported in online documents;2 only publications from 1995 onward were scored. Data in bold indicate studies used for the dosing recommendation of grass-pollen SC-AIT in the practice parameters on immunotherapy, third update.3
Abbreviations: AIT, allergen immunotherapy; GRADE, Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation; SAR, seasonal allergic rhinitis; SC-AIT, subcutaneous allergen immunotherapy; ITx, immunotherapy; Plac, placebo.
Clinical efficacy of SLIT: focus on five-grass tablet Oralair®
| Author, year | Q score | Age (yr) | Active/placebo or control | Dropout | Allergen, drop/tablet | Duration | Dose (µg/dose and dosing frequency) | Dose vs SCIT | Disease | Manufacturer | Statistically significant differences found in the following comparisons | No statistically significant differences in following comparisons |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Didier et al | 4 | 18–45 | 157-155-160/156 | 18-22-19/10 | 5-grass, tablet | 4–6 m | 100, 300 and 500IR daily (300IR −25 μg Phl p 5) | 30 | R(mA) | Stal | SLIT vs placebo: ⬇ Total rhinoconjunctivitis symptom score, days without symptoms in 300IR and 500IR groups. ⬇ Days with rescue medication use in 300IR group. ⬆ QoL dose-dependent increase in sIgG4 | SLIT vs placebo: NS differences 100IR in any variable |
| Didier et al | 3–4 | 18–50 | 2 m preseason | 60/58/54 | 5-grass, tablet | 4–6 m ×3 yrs | 25 μg Phl p 5 daily (300IR) | 30 | R(mA) | Stal | SLIT vs placebo: ⬇ Average adjusted sympt score in 2 m and 4 m preseasonal groups, and ⬇ Daily combined and medication score | X |
| Didier et al | 2–3 | At 4 yrs: 70/65/64 | SLIT vs placebo: ⬇ Average adjusted symptom score in 2 m and 4 m preseasonal groups. ⬇ Daily combined and medication score | X | ||||||||
| Didier et al | 3 | At 5 yrs: 90/80/86 | SLIT vs placebo: after 3 yrs SLIT: ⬇ Daily combined score in 2 m and 4 m preseasonal group. After 2 yrs post-SLIT: ⬇ Daily combined score in 4 m preseasonal group | 2 yrs after treatment: in 2 m preseasonal: daily combined score, daily rhinitis and daily med score | ||||||||
| Wahn et al | 4 | 4–17 | 139/139 | 8/4 | 5-grass, tablet | 8 m | 25 μg Phl p 5 daily (300IR) | 30 | R(mA) | Stal | SLIT vs placebo: improved total and individual rhinitis sympt ( | X |
| Halken et al | 3 | 6–8 m | 25 μg Phl p 5 daily (300IR) | 30 | R(mA) | Stal | SLIT-placebo: total symptom score reduced at whole and peak pollen season. Nasal and ocular sympt reduced. Less rescue medication during whole and peak pollen season | X | ||||
| Horak et al | 3 | 18–50 | 45/44 | 3/3 | 5-grass, tablet | 4 m | 25 μg Phl p 5 daily (300IR) | 30 | RC(mA) | SLIT vs placebo: allergen challenge chamber (ACC) symptom reduction at 1, 2, and 4 months | SLIT vs placebo: ACC symptom reduction at 1 week; ACC nasal airflow and weight of nasal secretions and SPT reactivity at 1, 2, and 4 months | |
| Cox et al | 4 | 18–65 | 210/228 | 5-grass, tablet | 6 m | 25 μg Phl p 5 daily (300IR) | 30 | ARC | Stal | SLIT-placebo: whole pollen season daily combined (− sympt + med), sympt, medication and adjusted symptom scores all reduced in SLIT. | SLIT-placebo: nasal itching | |
| Maloney et al | 4 | 5–65 | 750/751 | 6 m | 15 μg Phl p 5 daily | NS | RC(A) | ALK | SLIT-placebo: whole pollen season daily total combined (TCS − sympt+ med), sympt and medication scores all reduced in SLIT. Peak pollen TCS and RQLQ better in SLIT | X | ||
| Blaiss et al | 4 | 5–17 | 175/169 | 33/29 | Phleum pratense, tablet | 6 m | 15 μg Phl p 5 daily | NS | RC(A) | ALK | Active vs placebo: daily symptom (25%), daily med (81%), total score (26%) and QoL improved 18% ( | SLIT-placebo: asthma symptom score |
| Bufe et al | 4 | 5–16 | 126/127 | 12/7 | Phleum pratense, tablet | 6 m | 15 μg Phl p 5 daily | 30 | R(mA) | ALK | Active vs placebo: sign reduction in RC symptoms score (−24%), asthma score (−64%), RC meds (−34%), well days (+28%). All | X |
| Durham et al | 4 | 18–65 | 75k: 321 | 75k: 27 | Phleum pratense, tablet | 4 m | 15 μg Phl p 5 daily | 30 | RC(mA) | ALK | Active 75,000 SQ-T vs placebo: ⬇ Medication score entire season, sympt and med score peak pollen season and subgroup with ≥2 m pre-seasonal SLIT. ⬆ QoL and well days | 75.000 SQ-T vs placebo: sympt score over entire season |
| Durham et al | 2–3 | 18–65 | 316/318 | 5 years: 181/215 | Phleum pratense, tablet | 34 m | 15 μg Phl p 5 daily | 30 | RC(mA) | ALK | Active vs placebo: ⬇ Medication score entire season, sympt and med score peak pollen season and subgroup with ≥2 m preseasonal SLIT. ⬆ QoL and well days | |
| Bozek et al | 2 | 60–70 | 41/37 | 3/3 | 5-grass, liquid | 4 m for 3 yrs | 20 μg group 5 5 days/week | NS | RC | Stal | Active vs placebo: sign. ⬇ total nasal symptom score in active 1st, 2nd, and 3rd season (3rd yrs: 64 vs 7%). ⬇ Med score 3rd year 51% more than placebo. No SAE, only transient local AE in active group. Less NPT nasal flow reduction | Active vs placebo: non-nasal symptoms, PEF, NPT symptom score, sIgE [Medication scores 1st and 2nd year?] |
| Stelmach et al | 4 | 6–18 | Cont 20 Pre-co 20 Pla 20 | 1/3/2 | Grass, drops | 2 yrs | 10 μg group 5 daily cont: for 2 yrs Pre-co: 2×6 mo | NS | RC(mA) | Stal | Both active groups vs placebo: sign improvement Med + Symp score, sympt score Pre-co group vs placebo: sign reduction Med score | X |
| Swamy et al | 3 | 5–58 | 20/10 | 0/0 | DUAL − grass and HDM, drops | 12 m | 15 μg Phl p 1 | 1–2.8× each dose | RC | Greer | Active-placebo: Rhinoconjunctivitis symptom score, medication score and combined score reduced at 12 m and at 24 m (12 m after treatment discontinuation) ( | X |
| Wahn et al | 3 | 4–12 | 158/plac 49 | 26/2 | 6-grass, drops | 8 m | 40 μg group 5 daily | NS | RC(A) | All pharm | SLIT vs placebo: change in pre-posttreatment higher for Symp-Med, Symp, Med scores. | SLIT vs placebo: Mean nr. of well days |
| Pajno et al | 3 | 8–16 | Continuous 40/coseasonal 40 | 3/5 | Grass, drops | CONT 3 yrs COS: 3×4 m | 8 μg group 5, 5 times/week | NS | RA | Stal | Continous vs coseasonal: 1st year: sympt + med, symp, chest sympt and Med scores improved more in CONT SLIT | 3rd year: no difference in clinical outcomes between continuous vs co-seasonal SLIT |
| Panzner et al | 2.5 | Mean 17.6 | SLIT 26, supra-lingual 25 | 8 | 6-grass, drops | 12 m (+24 m open) | 11.2 μg group 5, 3 times/week | Total: 20× | R | Sevapharma | Pre-posttreatment Supra and SLIT: sympt, medication and combined score reduced year by year | SLIT vs Supra: trend for more sympt and med reduction in SLIT (NS) |
| Ott et al | 1 | 8–68 | 142/67 | 43/21 | 5-grass, drops | 3 m ×3 yrs | 25 μg Phl p 5 daily (300IR) | 30 | R | Stal | SLIT vs placebo improvement vs baseline year: ⬇ combined symptom-med score progressively over 3 treatment years ( | SLIT vs placebo compared to baseline year: SLIT higher medication score (!)1y post-Tx: combined sympt-med score NS |
| Agostinis et al | 4–16 | SLIT 20, control 20 | 0/0 | Grass, tablet | pre-co for 2 yrs | 1000 AU drops 5× week | NS | R(A) | Lofarma | SLIT vs control: VAS improved after 1st and 2nd year (both: | Control pre-post Tx: no reduction in sympt | |
| Ahmadiafshar et al | 0 | 5–18 | SLIT 12, Plac 12 | 2/2 | Lolium, drops | 6 m | 900IR 3/week | 100? | RC | Stal | SLIT pre-post Tx: reduction in sympt ( | SLIT vs placebo: not reported |
| Stelmach et al | 2 | 6–17 | SLIT 20, plac 15 | 5/10 | Grass, drops | pre-co for 2 yrs | 10 μg group 5 grass drops daily | NS | A | Stal | SLIT vs Pl: asthma symptoms ( | SLIT vs Pl: ocular symptoms, total asthma + nose + eye sympt |
| Seidenberg et al | 1 | 5–17 | SLIT 193 | 10 (+50 <4 m treatment) | Grass and/or tree, drops | 4 m | Started with ultra-rush up-dosing: 30-90-150-300IR each 30 minutes (μg?) | Final dose approx 30× SCIT dose | RC(A) | Stal | During updosing: 60 pts (31%) reported 117 predominantly mild and local AE, which resolved within 150 minutes During maintenance: 562 AE; most frequent local AE were oral pruritus, burning sensation, lip or tongue swelling, and GI symptoms; the most frequent systemic AE were RC and A. One clinically significant asthma event in an 11-year old male asthmatic: SLIT was resumed after 4 days | |
Notes:
Q score − quality assessment according to GRADE. Ref for effect size calculation: Thalheimer W, & Cook S. (2002, August). How to calculate effect sizes from published research articles: A simplified methodology. Retrieved November 16, 2012 from http://work-learning.com/effect_sizes.htm. X values represent trials where there were no parameters of importance to report in the corresponding column. Reproduced from Annals Allergy Asthma Immunol. Epub 2016. Larenas-Linnemann D, Why direct efficacy comparison of SLIT tablets for rhino-conjunctivitis, based on existing data, is non-valid. Copyright © 2016 with permission from Elsevier.61
Abbreviations: A, asthma; mA, mild asthma; AUC, area under the curve; B2, beta2-agonist; CET, cetirizine; DBPC, double-blind placebo-controlled; GI, gastrointestinal; HDM, house dust mite; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; Med score, medication scores; MEF25, mid expiratory flow at 25% pulmonary capacity; NS, not stated or not applicable; OIT-low/high, oral immunotherapy low dose/high dose; PFT, pulmonary function testing; QoL, quality of life; R, rhinitis; RC, rhinoconjunctivitis; SAE, serious adverse event; SCIT, subcutaneous immunotherapy; SLIT, sublingual immunotherapy; CONT SLIT, continuous year round schedule of SLIT; yrs, years; m, months; SMS, symptom and medication score; Stal, Stallergens; Tx, treatment.