AI Article Synopsis

  • Cockroach allergy significantly contributes to asthma issues in urban children, prompting a need for effective immunotherapy.
  • Four pilot studies were conducted to determine the safety and immune responses to cockroach sublingual and subcutaneous immunotherapy in both adults and children.
  • Results indicated that subcutaneous immunotherapy showed stronger immune response levels (especially in IgG4) compared to sublingual immunotherapy, with no safety concerns noted across all age groups.

Article Abstract

Background: Cockroach allergy is a key contributor to asthma morbidity in children living in urban environments.

Objective: We sought to document immune responses to cockroach allergen and provide direction for the development of immunotherapy for cockroach allergy.

Methods: Four pilot studies were conducted: (1) an open-label study to assess the safety of cockroach sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) in adults and children; (2) a randomized, double-blind biomarker study of cockroach SLIT versus placebo in adults; (3) a randomized, double-blind biomarker study of 2 doses of cockroach SLIT versus placebo in children; and (4) an open-label safety and biomarker study of cockroach subcutaneous immunotherapy (SCIT) in adults.

Results: The adult SLIT trial (n = 54; age, 18-54 years) found a significantly greater increase in cockroach-specific IgE levels between the active and placebo groups (geometric mean ratio, 1.92; P < .0001) and a trend toward increased cockroach-specific IgG4 levels in actively treated subjects (P = .09) but no evidence of functional blocking antibody response. The pediatric SLIT trial (n = 99; age, 5-17 years) found significant differences in IgE, IgG, and IgG4 responses between both active groups and the placebo group but no consistent differences between the high- and low-dose groups. In the SCIT study the treatment resulted in significant changes from baseline in cockroach IgE, IgG4, and blocking antibody levels. The safety profile of cockroach immunotherapy was reassuring in all studies.

Conclusions: The administration of cockroach allergen by means of SCIT is immunologically more active than SLIT, especially with regard to IgG4 levels and blocking antibody responses. No safety concerns were raised in any age group. These pilot studies suggest that immunotherapy with cockroach allergen is more likely to be effective with SCIT.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3943647PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2013.08.047DOI Listing

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