| Literature DB >> 32869882 |
Cristoforo Incorvaia1, Mona Al-Ahmad2,3, Ignacio J Ansotegui4, Stefania Arasi5, Claus Bachert6,7,8, Catherine Bos9, Jean Bousquet10, Andrzéj Bozek11, Davide Caimmi12, Moises A Calderón13, Thomas Casale14, Adnan Custovic15, Frédéric De Blay16, Pascal Demoly12,17, Philippe Devillier18, Alain Didier19, Alessandro Fiocchi5, Adam T Fox20, Philippe Gevaert6, Maximiliano Gomez21, Enrico Heffler22,23, Natalia Ilina24, Carla Irani25, Marek Jutel26, Efstrathios Karagiannis9, Ludger Klimek27, Piotr Kuna28, Robin O'Hehir29, Oxana Kurbacheva30, Paolo M Matricardi31, Mario Morais-Almeida32,33, Ralph Mosges34,35, Natalija Novak36, Yoshitaka Okamoto37, Petr Panzner38, Nikolaos G Papadopoulos39,40, Hae-Sim Park41, Giovanni Passalacqua42, Ruby Pawankar43, Oliver Pfaar44, Peter Schmid-Grendelmeier45, Silvia Scurati9, Miguel Tortajada-Girbés46,47,48, Carmen Vidal49, J Christian Virchow50, Ulrich Wahn31, Margitta Worm31, Petra Zieglmayer51, Giorgio W Canonica22,23.
Abstract
The introduction of personalized medicine (PM) has been a milestone in the history of medical therapy, because it has revolutionized the previous approach of treating the disease with that of treating the patient. It is known today that diseases can occur in different genetic variants, making specific treatments of proven efficacy necessary for a given endotype. Allergic diseases are particularly suitable for PM, because they meet the therapeutic success requirements, including a known molecular mechanism of the disease, a diagnostic tool for such disease, and a treatment blocking the mechanism. The stakes of PM in allergic patients are molecular diagnostics, to detect specific IgE to single-allergen molecules and to distinguish the causative molecules from those merely cross-reactive, pursuit of patient's treatable traits addressing genetic, phenotypic, and psychosocial features, and omics, such as proteomics, epi-genomics, metabolomics, and breathomics, to forecast patient's responsiveness to therapies, to detect biomarker and mediators, and to verify the disease control. This new approach has already improved the precision of allergy diagnosis and is likely to significantly increase, through the higher performance achieved with the personalized treatment, the effectiveness of allergen immunotherapy by enhancing its already known and unique characteristics of treatment that acts on the causes.Entities:
Keywords: allergen immunotherapy; molecular diagnosis; omics; personalized medicine; treatable traits
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32869882 DOI: 10.1111/all.14575
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Allergy ISSN: 0105-4538 Impact factor: 13.146