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Analysis of allergen immunotherapy studies shows increased clinical efficacy in highly symptomatic patients

Analysis of allergen immunotherapy studies shows increased clinical efficacy in highly symptomatic patients
Analysis of allergen immunotherapy studies shows increased clinical efficacy in highly symptomatic patients
Background: the assessment of allergen immunotherapy (AIT) efficacy in the treatment for seasonal allergic rhinoconjunctivitis (SAR) symptoms is challenging. Allergen immunotherapy differs from symptomatic therapy in that while symptomatic therapy treats patients after symptoms appear and aims to reduce symptoms, AIT is administered before symptoms are present and aims to prevent them. Thus, clinical studies of AIT can neither establish baseline symptom levels nor limit the enrolment of patients to those with the most severe symptoms. Allergen immunotherapy treatment effects are therefore diluted by patients with low symptoms for a particular pollen season. The objective of this analysis was to assess the effect possible to achieve with AIT in the groups of patients presenting the most severe allergic symptoms.

Methods: study centres were grouped into tertiles categorized according to symptom severity scores observed in the placebo patients in each centre (low, middle and high tertiles). The difference observed in the average score in each tertile in active vs placebo-treated patients was assessed. This allowed an estimation of the efficacy that could be achieved in patients from sites where symptoms were high during the pollen season.

Results: an increased treatment effect was observed in the most severe patients and was independent of the study analysed and symptom score used.

Conclusions: the use of a tertile approach to analyse efficacy in AIT in SAR clinical studies can give a more accurate assessment of potential clinical benefit
grass pollen rhinoconjunctivitis, seasonal allergic rhinoconjunctivitis, sublingual allergen immunotherapy, symptom severity
0105-4538
321-327
Howarth, Peter H.
ff19c8c4-86b0-4a88-8f76-b3d87f142a21
Malling, H.J.
7ff02ae7-ff95-4046-a5ca-dd863a33d897
Molimard, M.
bce98d6c-0252-4904-a436-feecc8b93f44
Devillier, P.
543ddb5b-59fe-44d1-af5b-0991951e34b2
Howarth, Peter H.
ff19c8c4-86b0-4a88-8f76-b3d87f142a21
Malling, H.J.
7ff02ae7-ff95-4046-a5ca-dd863a33d897
Molimard, M.
bce98d6c-0252-4904-a436-feecc8b93f44
Devillier, P.
543ddb5b-59fe-44d1-af5b-0991951e34b2

Howarth, Peter H., Malling, H.J., Molimard, M. and Devillier, P. (2012) Analysis of allergen immunotherapy studies shows increased clinical efficacy in highly symptomatic patients. Allergy, 67 (3), 321-327. (doi:10.1111/j.1398-9995.2011.02759.x). (PMID:22142377)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: the assessment of allergen immunotherapy (AIT) efficacy in the treatment for seasonal allergic rhinoconjunctivitis (SAR) symptoms is challenging. Allergen immunotherapy differs from symptomatic therapy in that while symptomatic therapy treats patients after symptoms appear and aims to reduce symptoms, AIT is administered before symptoms are present and aims to prevent them. Thus, clinical studies of AIT can neither establish baseline symptom levels nor limit the enrolment of patients to those with the most severe symptoms. Allergen immunotherapy treatment effects are therefore diluted by patients with low symptoms for a particular pollen season. The objective of this analysis was to assess the effect possible to achieve with AIT in the groups of patients presenting the most severe allergic symptoms.

Methods: study centres were grouped into tertiles categorized according to symptom severity scores observed in the placebo patients in each centre (low, middle and high tertiles). The difference observed in the average score in each tertile in active vs placebo-treated patients was assessed. This allowed an estimation of the efficacy that could be achieved in patients from sites where symptoms were high during the pollen season.

Results: an increased treatment effect was observed in the most severe patients and was independent of the study analysed and symptom score used.

Conclusions: the use of a tertile approach to analyse efficacy in AIT in SAR clinical studies can give a more accurate assessment of potential clinical benefit

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 6 December 2011
Published date: March 2012
Keywords: grass pollen rhinoconjunctivitis, seasonal allergic rhinoconjunctivitis, sublingual allergen immunotherapy, symptom severity
Organisations: Clinical & Experimental Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 337429
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/337429
ISSN: 0105-4538
PURE UUID: 14049362-9d33-4874-ac97-1b5b82a59612

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Date deposited: 26 Apr 2012 08:45
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 10:53

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Contributors

Author: H.J. Malling
Author: M. Molimard
Author: P. Devillier

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