| Literature DB >> 31437010 |
Lunfei Liu1,2, Jisu Chen1, Jinhua Xu3, Qinping Yang3, Chaoying Gu3, Chunya Ni3, Linfeng Li4, Xueyan Lu4, Zhirong Yao5, Jianfeng Tao5, Yifeng Guo5, Hong Fang6, Yingguo Ding6, Qihong Qian7, Naihui Zhou7, Miaomiao Wang7, Danqi Deng8, Hong Xie8, Shenqiu Li9, Yongchu Huang9, Naiqing Zhao10, Min Zheng1.
Abstract
Allergen-specific immunotherapy is widely used for allergic rhinitis and asthma treatment worldwide. This study explored the efficacy and safety of sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) with the extracts of Dermatophagoides Farinae (D. farinae Drops) on house dust mites (HDM)-induced atopic dermatitis (AD). 239 patients with HDM-induced AD were recruited and exposure to a multi-centre, randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled clinical trials for 36 weeks, which were randomly divided into placebo and sublingual D. farinae Drops groups (high-dose, medium-dose and low-dose), respectively. Statistical analysis was performed in three groups: Full Analysis Set, Per Protocol Set and Safety Set. 48 cases have withdrawn from the study before the end of study. As primary outcomes, significant decreases in scoring atopic dermatitis and total medication score were showed in medium-dose and high-dose D. farinae Drops groups. In the sixth visit, the skin lesion area showed a statistically significant difference between high-dose/medium-dose D. farinae Drops group and placebo group (p < .05). Most adverse events are slight, and no life-threatening adverse drug reaction happened. Our research demonstrates the beneficial effect of SLIT with high or medium dose D. farinae Drops on AD, and the treatment was well tolerated.Entities:
Keywords: Drops; Sublingual immunotherapy; atopic dermatitis; clinical phase II trial
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31437010 DOI: 10.1080/21691401.2019.1640709
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Artif Cells Nanomed Biotechnol ISSN: 2169-1401 Impact factor: 5.678