| Literature DB >> 32994784 |
Krzysztof Pałgan1, Magdalena Żbikowska-Götz1, Zbigniew Bartuzi1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Venom immunotherapy (VIT) can protect against severe anaphylactic reactions (SR) in 80-100% of subjects allergic to Hymenoptera venom. The mechanisms of induction of immunological tolerance produced by VIT are still little known. It has been shown that VIT modulates Treg activity, Th2 or Th1 cells or both, increases production of IL-10, decreases secretion of IL-13, and causes an IgG4/IgE ratio shift. AIM: To investigate the blood eosinophil count, CCL5/RANTES and IL-17E/IL-25 concentrations before and after the initial phases of the rush protocol of VIT.Entities:
Keywords: 17E/IL-25; CCL5/ RANTES; Hymenoptera sting; eosinophil; venom immunotherapy
Year: 2019 PMID: 32994784 PMCID: PMC7507153 DOI: 10.5114/ada.2019.83655
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Postepy Dermatol Alergol ISSN: 1642-395X Impact factor: 1.837
Demographic and clinical characteristics of patients qualified for VIT
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Number of patients | 40 |
| Age [years]: | |
| Mean | 41.03 ±12.43 |
| Min./max. | 16/71 |
| Male | 14 (35%) |
| Female | 26 (65%) |
| Bee venom-sensitized patients | 20 |
| Mean age [years]: | 40.9 ±15.35 |
| Male | 9 |
| Female | 11 |
| Time between the last severe systemic reaction after sting and the hospitalization [months] | 15.39 ±13.53 |
| Wasp venom-sensitized patients | 20 |
| Mean age [years]: | 41.17 ±9.52 |
| Male | 4 |
| Female | 16 |
| Time between the last allergic reaction after sting and the hospitalization [months] | 20.45 ±27.16 |
| Systemic reactions to Hymenoptera (according to Mueller): | |
| Grade III | 15 (37.5%) |
| Grade IV | 25 (62.5%) |
| Sensitization to other allergens (tree, grass, weeds, mites, moulds): | |
| Male | 1 (2.5%) |
| Female | 3 (7.5%) |
Figure 1Effects of rush VIT on the number of peripheral blood eosinophils. A – All patients treated with bee and wasp venom. Eosinophils (Eos) before and 1 day after the initial phase of VIT. B – Patients treated with wasp venom. Eosinophils (Eos) before and 1 day after the initial phase of VIT. C – Patients treated with bee venom. Eosinophils (Eos) before and 1 day after the initial phase of VIT
Figure 2Effect of the initial phase of Hymenoptera venom immunotherapy on serum IL-17E/IL-25 concentration. A – All patients treated with bee and wasp venom. 17E/IL-25 concentration before and 1 day after VIT. B – Patients treated with wasp venom. 17E/IL-25 concentration before and 1 day after VIT. C – Patients treated with bee venom. 17E/IL-25 concentration before and 1 day after VIT
Figure 3Effect of initial phase of Hymenoptera venom immunotherapy on serum RANTES concentration. A – All patients treated with bee and wasp venom. CCL5/RANTES concentration before and 1 day after VIT. B – Patients treated with bee venom. CCL5/RANTES concentration before and 1 day after VIT. C – Patients treated with wasp venom. CCL5/RANTES concentration before and 1 day after VIT