Background: Specific immunotherapy (SIT) efficacy and safety by subcutaneous (SCIT) and sublingual (SLIT) route is supported by literature data. Pre-coseasonal treatment is currently the more accepted option for pollen immunotherapy in terms of costs and patient's compliance. This retrospective study evaluated the patient's preference concerning subcutaneous or sublingual route in pre-coseasonal treatment.
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March 2011
A 3-year prospective post marketing survey on the safety of the recently developed ultrashort pre-seasonal subcutaneous immunotherapy (uSCIT-MPL4) with pollen allergoids adjuvanted with monophosphoryl lipid A was performed. A total of 510 patients received uSCIT-MPL4, 61% for grass, 35.7% for birch, 13.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Immunopathol Pharmacol
January 2000
In recent years, several controlled studies have proved the efficacy and safety of sublingual specific immunotherapy, as a possible alternative to the classic subcutaneous route of administration. This alternative option has been officially confirmed by the recent WHO position paper "Allergen Immunotherapy: Therapeutic Vaccines for Allergic Diseases'". Since sublingual immunotherapy has now been widely used for years, we carried out an open, multicentric, retrospective study to investigate the efficacy and safety of this form of treatment in a large number of patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Immunopathol Pharmacol
March 2003
There is now an increasing body of evidence to support the practice of allergen-specific sublingual-swallow immunotherapy (SLIT) in the treatment of IgE-mediated respiratory allergies. Recent studies on traditional injection therapy have pointed out that this form of treatment is not only capable to decrease actual allergic symptoms, but may also have long-term clinical and preventive effects and may influence atopy natural history. In the year 2000, our group published a retrospective, multicenter study showing the efficacy and safety of SLIT in a survey of 302 patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Allergy Clin Immunol
February 1987
Twenty-seven patients with hay fever had a carbachol inhalation challenge both out of season and during the pollen season. Eight patients with allergic asthma were used as a control group. Only three patients (11.
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