AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigated whether short-term sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) can effectively reduce asthma development in children aged 5 to 14 with hay fever, comparing it to traditional subcutaneous immunotherapy.
  • - Conducted among 113 participants across 6 pediatric allergy centers in Italy, the study showed that those receiving SLIT required less medication and had lower symptom scores over three years.
  • - Findings revealed that children on SLIT had a significantly lower rate of developing asthma (3.8 times less) compared to those receiving only symptomatic treatment, indicating SLIT's effectiveness in managing hay fever and preventing asthma.

Article Abstract

Background: We wondered whether short-term coseasonal sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) can reduce the development of asthma in children with hay fever in an open randomized study.

Objective: We sought to determine whether SLIT is as effective as subcutaneous immunotherapy in reducing hay fever symptoms and the development of asthma in children with hay fever.

Methods: One hundred thirteen children aged 5 to 14 years (mean age, 7.7 years) with hay fever limited to grass pollen and no other clinically important allergies were randomized in an open study involving 6 Italian pediatric allergy centers to receive specific SLIT for 3 years or standard symptomatic therapy. All of the subjects had hay fever symptoms, but at the time of study entry, none reported seasonal asthma with more than 3 episodes per season. Symptomatic treatment was limited to cetirizine, loratadine, nasal budesonide, and salbutamol on demand. The hay fever and asthma symptoms were quantified clinically.

Results: The actively treated children used less medication in the second and third years of therapy, and their symptom scores tended to be lower. From the second year of immunotherapy, subjective evaluation of overall allergy symptoms was favorable in the actively treated children. Development of asthma after 3 years was 3.8 times more frequent (95% confidence limits, 1.5-10.0) in the control subjects.

Conclusions: Three years of coseasonal SLIT improves seasonal allergic rhinitis symptoms and reduces the development of seasonal asthma in children with hay fever.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2004.07.012DOI Listing

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