| Literature DB >> 33224138 |
Ann-Marie Malby Schoos1,2, Dominique Bullens3,4, Bo Lund Chawes1, Joana Costa5, Liselot De Vlieger3, Audrey DunnGalvin6,7, Michelle M Epstein8, Johan Garssen9,10, Christiane Hilger11, Karen Knipping9,10, Annette Kuehn11, Dragan Mijakoski12,13, Daniel Munblit7,14, Nikita A Nekliudov7, Cevdet Ozdemir15,16, Karine Patient17, Diego Peroni18, Sasho Stoleski12,13, Eva Stylianou19, Mirjana Tukalj20,21,22, Kitty Verhoeckx23, Mihaela Zidarn24, Willem van de Veen25,26.
Abstract
IgE-mediated food allergies are caused by adverse immunologic responses to food proteins. Allergic reactions may present locally in different tissues such as skin, gastrointestinal and respiratory tract and may result is systemic life-threatening reactions. During the last decades, the prevalence of food allergies has significantly increased throughout the world, and considerable efforts have been made to develop curative therapies. Food allergen immunotherapy is a promising therapeutic approach for food allergies that is based on the administration of increasing doses of culprit food extracts, or purified, and sometime modified food allergens. Different routes of administration for food allergen immunotherapy including oral, sublingual, epicutaneous and subcutaneous regimens are being evaluated. Although a wealth of data from clinical food allergen immunotherapy trials has been obtained, a lack of consistency in assessed clinical and immunological outcome measures presents a major hurdle for evaluating these new treatments. Coordinated efforts are needed to establish standardized outcome measures to be applied in food allergy immunotherapy studies, allowing for better harmonization of data and setting the standards for the future research. Several immunological parameters have been measured in food allergen immunotherapy, including allergen-specific immunoglobulin levels, basophil activation, cytokines, and other soluble biomarkers, T cell and B cell responses and skin prick tests. In this review we discuss different immunological parameters and assess their applicability as potential outcome measures for food allergen immunotherapy that may be included in such a standardized set of outcome measures.Entities:
Keywords: food allergy; immunology; immunotherapy; oral immunotherapy; outcome measures; tolerance
Year: 2020 PMID: 33224138 PMCID: PMC7670865 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.568598
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Immunological mechanisms of allergic sensitization. Epithelial cells produce alarmins such as IL-25, IL-33, and TSLP in response to external insults. These cytokines are central regulators of type 2 immunity, as they act on dendritic cells to induce TH2 responses and activate ILC2 cells leading to production of IL-13 and IL-5. Allergens and pathogens that pass skin or mucosal epithelial barriers are captured and processed by dendritic cells (DCs), which in turn migrate to draining lymph nodes, where they present allergen-derived peptides on MHC class II molecules to naïve T cells, which in turn (depending on co-stimulatory and cytokine signals) can differentiate to TH2 cells or TFH cells. TH2 cells produce type 2 cytokines such as IL-4, IL-13, IL-5, and IL-9, and function as effector cells that drive many aspects of allergic inflammatory responses. TFH cells produce IL-21, IL-4, and IL-13 and induce IgE class switch recombination in B cells, plasma cell differentiation and allergen-specific IgE production. Plasma cell produce allergen-specific IgE antibodies that are released into circulation and can bind to FcϵRI molecules on mast cells and basophils. Subsequent exposure to allergen can result in mast cell and basophil degranulation.
Immunological markers and their potential predictive value in food AIT.
| Biomarker | Predictor for successful AIT* | Marker during/at the end of AIT | Marker for SU |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| SPT | + (↓) | +++ (↓) | +(↓) |
| CD63 (BAT) | + (↓) | +++ (↓) | + (↓) |
|
| |||
| sIgE | + (↓) | +++ (↑→↓) | + (↓) |
| sIgE/total IgE ratio | + (↓) | (+)(↓) | ++ (↓) |
| Specific IgG4 | + (↑) | +++ (↑) | ++ (↑) |
| IgG4/IgE ratio | (+)(↑) | +++ (↑) | ++ (↑) |
| IgA | +/- (↑ and ↓) | +++ (↑) | (+) (↑) |
*The smaller (↓) or higher (↑) the better chance of success.
+indicates the biomarker changes during AIT or differs between responders vs. no-responders.
-indicates the biomarker does not change during AIT or does not differ between responders vs. no-responders
+, one study/weak evidence.
++, two studies/medium level of evidence.
+++, at least three studies showing the same thing/strong evidence.
This table only lists immunological markers that were reported to have predictive value for desensitization (successful AIT), sustained unresponsiveness (SU), or that showed significant changers during AIT in at least two studies.