Literature DB >> 28814941

A survey on the perception of allergy specialists about the reimbursed grass pollen tablets for seasonal allergic rhinitis in Italy.

Ilaria Massaro1, Oliviero Rossi2, Cristoforo Incorvaia3, Carlo Lombardi4.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) is a feasible option to classical subcutaneous immunotherapy to treat respiratory allergy and is increasingly prescribed in Europe. However, the lack of reimbursement may limit its prescription. In 2015, the 5-grass pollen tablets was authorized by the European Medicine Agency to treat grass-pollen induced rhinitis and was approved in Italy for full reimbursement. We evaluated the opinions of allergy specialists after the availability of the reimbursed 5-grass pollen tablets.
METHODS: A multiple choice questionnaire composed by six questions was used to assess the specialists opinion. The questionnaire was uploaded on the free access online platform SurveyMonkey. The link to access the platform was sent to all members of the Società Italiana di Asma, Allergologia e Immunologia Clinica (SIAAIC). The access to the questionnaire was anonymous. At survey ending, the access was closed and data were downloaded directly from SurveyMonkey website.
RESULTS: The questionnaire was filled by 70 allergists. The majority of allergists felt as most important the concept of SLIT as a drug, the content of allergen extract mirroring the natural exposure, the pre-coseasonal schedule as the most patient's oriented, the very good profile of tolerability and safety, the importance of the build-up phase, and the importance of checking the patient after starting immunotherapy.
CONCLUSIONS: The opinions of the Italian allergy specialists about the reimbursed 5-grass-pollen tablets are very positive and make likely an appropriate prescription of SLIT for grass-pollen induced rhinitis in the next years.

Entities:  

Year:  2017        PMID: 28814941      PMCID: PMC5558723          DOI: 10.1186/s12948-017-0071-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Mol Allergy        ISSN: 1476-7961


Background

Allergen immunotherapy (AIT) is an efficacious, evidence-based treatment for allergic rhinitis [1]. Sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) is a feasible option to classical subcutaneous immunotherapy (SCIT), that has its main advantages over SCIT in a better safety and in a lower cost [2, 3]. Actually, SLIT is increasingly prescribed also in countries where SCIT has been dominant, such as Germany [4] and is the most used form of AIT in Italy [5]. The allowance of allergen extracts for AIT by the different regional health systems in Italy is uneven, and in a study that evaluated the factors influencing the AIT prescription by a questionnaire submitted to about 450 specialists, the cost of treatment and the reimbursement were listed among the factors possibly influencing the prescription [6]. In 2015, the 5-grass pollen tablets, based on the fulfillment of all the requirements by the European Medicine Agency (EMA), that resulted in the authorization of the product to treat grass-pollen induced rhinitis, was approved by the Agenzia Italiana per il Farmaco (AIFA) for full reimbursement, i.e. class A, as for drugs [7]. We aimed this study at evaluating the opinions of allergy specialists after the availability of the reimbursed 5-grass pollen tablets.

Methods

A multiple choice questionnaire developed by a group of allergists of the Società Italiana di Asma, Allergologia e Immunologia Clinica (SIAAIC) and composed by six questions (reported in Table 1) was used to assess the specialists opinion. The questionnaire was uploaded on the free access online platform SurveyMonkey (http://www.surveymonkey.com) on March 1 2016. The link to access the platform and the optional answers to the questionnaire was sent to all SIAAIC members by the SIAAIC scientific secretary. The access to the questionnaire was anonymous. On April 7 2016 the access was closed and data were downloaded directly from SurveyMonkey website.
Table 1

Questions and answers choices

QuestionsChoices
According to your experience, what was changed by the reimbursement of the grass-pollen tablets for seasonal rhinitis?a. Accessibility to sublingual immunotherapyb. Possibility to adequately treat patients with moderate to severe seasonal rhinitisc. Possibility to treat all ARIA stages of rhinitisd. The concept of AIT as a drug
According to your opinion, how important is that the content of the allergen extract mirror the patient’s natural exposure?a. Very importantb. Not importantc. I do not know
Which is the treatment schedule for grass pollen-induced rhinitis more oriented toward patient’s preference?a. Perennialb. Pre-coseasonalc. Indifferent
According to your experience, the registered sublingual immunotherapy has a tolerability and safety profilea. Very goodb. Goodc. Quite low
In performing sublingual immunotherapy, is the build-up phase important?a. Yesb. Noc. I do not know
After starting registered sublingual immunotherapy, do you check the patient after some weeks/months?a. Alwaysb. Sometimesc. Never
Questions and answers choices

Results

Seventy allergists anonymously filled in the questionnaire. Figures 1 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 depict the data obtained. The majority of allergists chose as most important the concept of AIT as a drug for question 1, the content of allergen extract mirroring the natural exposure for question 2, the pre-coseasonal schedule as the most patient’s oriented for question 3, a very good profile of tolerability and safety for question 4, the importance of the build-up phase for question 5, and the importance of checking the patient after starting immunotherapy for question 6.
Fig. 1

Answers to the question “According to your experience, what was changed by the reimbursement of the grass-pollen tablets for seasonal rhinitis?”

Fig. 2

Answers to the question “According to your opinion, how important is that the content of the allergen extract mirror the patient’s natural exposure?”

Fig. 3

Answers to the question “Which is the treatment schedule for grass pollen-induced rhinitis more oriented toward patient’s preference?”

Fig. 4

Answers to the question “According to your experience, the registered sublingual immunotherapy has a tolerability and safety profile”

Fig. 5

Answers to the question “In performing sublingual immunotherapy, is the build-up phase important?”

Fig. 6

Answers to the question “After starting registered sublingual immunotherapy, do you check the patient after some weeks/months?”

Answers to the question “According to your experience, what was changed by the reimbursement of the grass-pollen tablets for seasonal rhinitis?” Answers to the question “According to your opinion, how important is that the content of the allergen extract mirror the patient’s natural exposure?” Answers to the question “Which is the treatment schedule for grass pollen-induced rhinitis more oriented toward patient’s preference?” Answers to the question “According to your experience, the registered sublingual immunotherapy has a tolerability and safety profile” Answers to the question “In performing sublingual immunotherapy, is the build-up phase important?” Answers to the question “After starting registered sublingual immunotherapy, do you check the patient after some weeks/months?”

Discussion

The registration of grass pollen tablets as pharmaceutical quality products for grass pollen-induced rhinitis was a breakthrough in the history of AIT [7]. In fact, the commonly used AIT products were defined as Named Patient Products (NPP), because they were individual preparations that were not considered by the regulatory agencies as registered products [8]. The large placebo-controlled trials with grass pollen tablets performed to obtain the authorization by EMA as registered products clearly demonstrated the efficacy and safety of SLIT and paved the way to the modern AIT [9, 10]. In particular, the registration of the 5-grass-pollen tablets, as well as the data obtained from post marketing studies dealing with pharmacoeconomic impact [11] and patients’ phenotyping [12] has led to the approval for full reimbursement by AIFA as a treatment for seasonal allergic rhinitis. Soon after, the one-grass (Phleum pratense) pollen tablet was also approved. In this survey we evaluated the opinions of the Italian allergy specialists about the reimbursed grass-pollen tablets, including the differences between the 5 grass-pollen and the 1-grass pollen tablets. The number of allergy specialists participating to the survey was not large, but the decision to fill in the questionnaire was spontaneous and no repeated invitation was sent. The overall opinion on the grass-pollen tablets identified as key factors the concept of AIT products as drugs (indicated by 51% of the allergists) and the utility of patient’s monitoring after starting the treatment (indicated by 74% of the allergists). The other four issues allowed to highlight the perceived differences between the two products. Concerning the question assessing the value of an allergen content mirroring the natural exposure of patients to grass pollen, 92% of the allergists attributed to such factor a pivotal importance. Indeed, the superior adequacy of SLIT by a mix of five grasses over only P. pratense in Italian patients was indicated by both botanical and immunological studies. From the botanical point of view, phenologic analyses were performed on a number of grasses, by sampling every 10 days, starting in April, in 50 stations distributed across Italy. The flowering phase was assessed using a stereomicroscopy-based method for the detection of spreading stamens, and the data were compared to those from the official pollen calendar. Relevant differences were found between grass pollen count and effective flowering of the grass species as assessed by phenology. In fact, only some species contributed to the pollen peak, while important Pooideae, such as P. pratense, were not present during the pollen peak in northern and central Italy [13]. Immunological data supported the botanical observation, based on the results obtained with RAST-inhibition using sera of grass allergic patients from central Italy, that showed a significantly higher binding by the 5-grass extract compared with the P. pratense extract when grass pollens other than P. pratense were tested [14]. The questions concerning the pre-coseasonal schedule as the most patient’s oriented, the profile of tolerability and safety and the importance of the build-up phase pertain to the same issue. In fact, a pre-coseasonal protocol, as indicated for the 5-grass pollen tablets, is defined as optimal for pollen allergy [15], while the protocol indicated for P. pratense tablet is perennial. In addition, the build-up phase and the safety are apparently related, as shown by the fact that the majority of severe adverse reactions occurred with the administration of the first dose of the P. pratense tablet, that has no build-up phase [16, 17]. On the other hand, in the position paper endorsed by the World Health Organization allergen immunotherapy is defined as “the practice of administering gradually increasing quantities of an allergen extract to an allergic subject to ameliorate the symptoms associated with subsequent exposure to the causative allergen” [18]. Thus, an AIT schedule with no build-up phase is not adherent to such definition. In conclusion, the opinions of the Italian allergy specialists about the reimbursed 5-grass-pollen tablets are very positive and make likely an appropriate prescription of SLIT for grass-pollen induced rhinitis in the next years. Expanding this kind of survey to other specialists and including in the questionnaires also a comparison between AIT registered tablets and the common NPP is likely to further improve our knowledge on physicians opinion on AIT.
  18 in total

1.  Rare adverse events due to house dust mite sublingual immunotherapy in pediatric practice: two case reports.

Authors:  Nilufer Galip; Nerin Bahceciler
Journal:  Immunotherapy       Date:  2015-10-02       Impact factor: 4.196

2.  Factors influencing the prescription of allergen immunotherapy: the allergen immunotherapy decision analysis (AIDA) study.

Authors:  F Frati; C Incorvaia; G Cadario; A Fiocchi; G E Senna; O Rossi; A Romano; E Scala; C Romano; A Ingrassia; M Zambito; I Dell'albani; S Scurati; G Passalacqua; G W Canonica
Journal:  Eur Ann Allergy Clin Immunol       Date:  2013-10-01

Review 3.  Regulatory environment for allergen-specific immunotherapy.

Authors:  S Kaul; S May; D Lüttkopf; Stefan Vieths
Journal:  Allergy       Date:  2011-02-03       Impact factor: 13.146

Review 4.  Comparative efficacy and safety of subcutaneous versus sublingual immunotherapy.

Authors:  Cindy S Bauer; Matthew A Rank
Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol       Date:  2014-09       Impact factor: 10.793

Review 5.  Sublingual or subcutaneous immunotherapy for seasonal allergic rhinitis: an indirect analysis of efficacy, safety and cost.

Authors:  George Dranitsaris; Anne K Ellis
Journal:  J Eval Clin Pract       Date:  2014-01-21       Impact factor: 2.431

6.  Bridging allergologic and botanical knowledge in seasonal allergy: a role for phenology.

Authors:  Giuseppe Frenguelli; Giovanni Passalacqua; Sergio Bonini; Alessandro Fiocchi; Cristoforo Incorvaia; Francesco Marcucci; Emma Tedeschini; Giorgio Walter Canonica; Franco Frati
Journal:  Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol       Date:  2010-09       Impact factor: 6.347

7.  Optimal dose, efficacy, and safety of once-daily sublingual immunotherapy with a 5-grass pollen tablet for seasonal allergic rhinitis.

Authors:  Alain Didier; Hans-Jörgen Malling; Margitta Worm; Friedrich Horak; Siegfried Jäger; Armelle Montagut; Claude André; Olivier de Beaumont; Michel Melac
Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol       Date:  2007-11-01       Impact factor: 10.793

Review 8.  International consensus on allergy immunotherapy.

Authors:  Marek Jutel; Ioana Agache; Sergio Bonini; A Wesley Burks; Moises Calderon; Walter Canonica; Linda Cox; Pascal Demoly; Antony J Frew; Robin O'Hehir; Jörg Kleine-Tebbe; Antonella Muraro; Gideon Lack; Désirée Larenas; Michael Levin; Harald Nelson; Ruby Pawankar; Oliver Pfaar; Ronald van Ree; Hugh Sampson; Alexandra F Santos; George Du Toit; Thomas Werfel; Roy Gerth van Wijk; Luo Zhang; Cezmi A Akdis
Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol       Date:  2015-07-07       Impact factor: 10.793

9.  Allergy immunotherapy prescribing trends for grass pollen-induced allergic rhinitis in Germany: a retrospective cohort analysis.

Authors:  Amanda L McDonell; Ulrich Wahn; Dirk Demuth; Catrina Richards; Charlie Hawes; Jakob Nørgaard Andreasen; Felicia Allen-Ramey
Journal:  Allergy Asthma Clin Immunol       Date:  2015-06-10       Impact factor: 3.406

10.  A major step forward for sublingual immunotherapy: the quality of 5-grass pollen tablet is recognized also in Italy.

Authors:  Giorgio Ciprandi
Journal:  J Asthma Allergy       Date:  2015-03-06
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