AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated the relationship between changes in CD4(+) T cell responses and clinical effectiveness of sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) in grass pollen-allergic individuals.
  • SLIT resulted in a significant improvement in allergy symptoms compared to a placebo, but only minor changes were observed in T cell markers and cytokine gene expression, with no clear correlation to clinical benefits.
  • The findings suggest that alterations in peripheral CD4(+) T cell patterns do not serve as reliable indicators for the early effectiveness of SLIT.

Article Abstract

Background: Surrogate biomarkers of efficacy are needed in support of allergen-specific immunotherapy.

Objective: The aim of this study was to relate changes in peripheral CD4(+) T cell responses to clinical efficacy during sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT).

Methods: Allergen-specific CD4(+) T cell responses were assessed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from 89 grass pollen-allergic individuals enrolled in a double-blind placebo-controlled SLIT study conducted in an allergen exposure chamber (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00619827). Surface phenotype, proliferative responses, cytokine production and gene expression were analysed in coded samples at baseline, and after 2 and 4 months of SLIT, in PBMCs after in vitro allergen stimulation or among MHC class II/peptide (pMHCII)-tetramer-positive CD4(+) T cells.

Results: SLIT induced a 29.3% improvement of the average rhinoconjunctivitis total symptom score in the active group, when compared to the placebo group. In parallel, only minor changes in proportions of CD4(+) T cells expressing Th1 (CCR5(+), CXCR3(+)), Th2 (CRTh2(+), CCR4(+)) and Treg (CD25(+), CD127(-), Foxp3(+)) markers were detected. A down-regulation of IL-4 and IL-10 gene expression and IL-10 secretion (P < 0.001) were observed, as well as a decrease in the frequency of potential "pro-allergic" CD27(-) Th2 cells from patients receiving active tablets (P < 0.001), but without any correlation with clinical benefit. pMHCII-tetramer analyses failed to document any major impact in both numbers and polarization of circulating Phl p 1- and Phl p 5-specific CD4(+) T cells, confirming that early clinical improvement during SLIT is not associated with dramatic alterations in T lymphocyte responses.

Conclusion & Clinical Relevance: Changes in patterns of peripheral CD4(+) T cells are not markers for the early onset of efficacy during SLIT.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cea.12015DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cd4+ cell
12
cell responses
12
cd4+ cells
12
allergen-specific cd4+
8
peripheral blood
8
early onset
8
clinical efficacy
8
sublingual immunotherapy
8
peripheral cd4+
8
gene expression
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!