AI Article Synopsis

  • - The PALISADE study investigated the effects of peanut oral immunotherapy (POIT) using AR101 on peanut-allergic children, demonstrating that it can lead to desensitization and positive immunological changes.
  • - Blood samples showed that participants who successfully desensitized had lower basophil sensitivity and T-cell reactivity to peanuts compared to those who reacted during the challenge test, indicating a significant shift in their immune response.
  • - The results support the idea that AR101 therapy reshapes peanut-reactive T cells, enhancing clinical outcomes while suggesting the therapy's potential as a future treatment option for peanut allergies.

Article Abstract

Background: The PALISADE study, an international, phase 3 trial of peanut oral immunotherapy (POIT) with AR101, resulted in desensitization in children and adolescents who were highly allergic to peanut. An improved understanding of the immune mechanism induced in response to food allergen immunotherapy would enable more informed and effective therapeutic strategies. Our main purpose was to examine the immunological changes in blood samples from a subset of peanut-allergic individuals undergoing oral desensitization immunotherapy with AR101.

Methods: Blood samples obtained as part of enrollment screening and at multiple time points during PALISADE study were used to assess basophil and CD4+ T-cell reactivity to peanut.

Results: The absence of clinical reactivity to the entry double-blinded placebo-controlled peanut challenge (DBPCFC) was accompanied by a significantly lower basophil sensitivity and T-cell reactivity to peanut compared with DBPCFC reactors. At baseline, peanut-reactive TH2A cells were observed in many but not all peanut-allergic patients and their level in peripheral blood correlates with T-cell reactivity to peanut and with serum peanut-specific IgE and IgG4 levels. POIT reshaped circulating peanut-reactive T-cell responses in a subset-dependent manner. Changes in basophil and T-cell responses to peanut closely paralleled clinical benefits to AR101 therapy and resemble responses in those with lower clinical sensitivity to peanut. However, no difference in peanut-reactive Treg cell frequency was observed between groups.

Conclusion: Oral desensitization therapy with AR101 leads to decreased basophil sensitivity to peanut and reshapes peanut-reactive T effector cell responses supporting its potential as an immunomodulatory therapy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9356972PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/all.15276DOI Listing

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