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Design and recruitment for the GAP trial, investigating the preventive effect on asthma development of an SQ-standardized grass allergy immunotherapy tablet in children with grass pollen-induced allergic rhinoconjunctivitis

Design and recruitment for the GAP trial, investigating the preventive effect on asthma development of an SQ-standardized grass allergy immunotherapy tablet in children with grass pollen-induced allergic rhinoconjunctivitis
Design and recruitment for the GAP trial, investigating the preventive effect on asthma development of an SQ-standardized grass allergy immunotherapy tablet in children with grass pollen-induced allergic rhinoconjunctivitis
Background
Allergic rhinoconjunctivitis is a risk factor for asthma development. Treating the underlying allergy may represent an attractive method of asthma prevention. No regulatory guidance exists in this area, and, to our knowledge, no clinical investigations meeting modern regulatory standards have been published.

Objective
The objective of this publication is to describe the rationale behind the design of and report on the recruitment for the ongoing pediatric Grazax Asthma Prevention (GAP) trial.

Methods
The trial was designed for assessment of the preventive effect of an SQ-standardized grass allergy immunotherapy tablet (AIT) on asthma development, both during treatment and after the end of treatment. (The standardized quality [SQ] procedure is a standardization procedure comprising 3 components: total potency, major allergen content, and assessment of extract complexity.) The trial design was discussed with several European Competent Authorities.

Results
The GAP trial is a multinational, parallel-group, double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized trial. Main eligibility criteria were age of 5 to 12 years, grass pollen–induced allergic rhinoconjunctivitis, no asthma, and no overlapping symptomatic allergies. The children have been randomized 1:1 to receive the grass AIT or placebo once daily for 3 years, followed by a blinded observational period of 2 years. Asthma is assessed by the investigators according to specific diagnostic criteria, used at screening visits before randomization to exclude children with existing asthma, and evaluated at least half-yearly during the trial. Seven months of screening resulted in 812 randomized children at 101 centers in 11 countries.

Conclusions
To our knowledge, the GAP trial represents the first double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized trial to assess the preventive effect of allergen-specific immunotherapy on asthma development. A total of 812 children were successfully recruited into the trial. EudraCT number: 2009-011235-12.
allergy, asthma, grass, immunotherapy, prevention, tablet
0149-2918
1537-1546
Valovirta, Erkka
ef88c572-ca23-4dce-8026-0b0e142ab024
Berstad, Aud Katrine Herland
da1a1f72-ac9c-4938-aaa6-97b63b22f26c
de Blic, Jacques
ab8c89fe-8158-47ae-a092-00b6a182dea8
Bufe, Albrecht
759b0958-6cbe-4236-b9f9-f72e35e621cd
Eng, Peter
086f57a4-1cbd-4ab0-82aa-e5ad908e79c6
Halken, Susanne
2d3b1100-70d1-46e1-8466-15990d478a9f
Ojeda, Pedro
76245ff2-a9cf-4db1-9e70-6acbdd30dbd1
Roberts, Graham
ea00db4e-84e7-4b39-8273-9b71dbd7e2f3
Tommerup, Lene
875d2746-06b8-43e8-9d05-dc00e96ddbdb
Varga, Eva-Maria
5c57306f-968a-435c-a97c-2e51fc4951dc
Winnergard, Inger
2705a03a-fb24-4b78-b6f8-42b02528c519
Valovirta, Erkka
ef88c572-ca23-4dce-8026-0b0e142ab024
Berstad, Aud Katrine Herland
da1a1f72-ac9c-4938-aaa6-97b63b22f26c
de Blic, Jacques
ab8c89fe-8158-47ae-a092-00b6a182dea8
Bufe, Albrecht
759b0958-6cbe-4236-b9f9-f72e35e621cd
Eng, Peter
086f57a4-1cbd-4ab0-82aa-e5ad908e79c6
Halken, Susanne
2d3b1100-70d1-46e1-8466-15990d478a9f
Ojeda, Pedro
76245ff2-a9cf-4db1-9e70-6acbdd30dbd1
Roberts, Graham
ea00db4e-84e7-4b39-8273-9b71dbd7e2f3
Tommerup, Lene
875d2746-06b8-43e8-9d05-dc00e96ddbdb
Varga, Eva-Maria
5c57306f-968a-435c-a97c-2e51fc4951dc
Winnergard, Inger
2705a03a-fb24-4b78-b6f8-42b02528c519

Valovirta, Erkka, Berstad, Aud Katrine Herland, de Blic, Jacques, Bufe, Albrecht, Eng, Peter, Halken, Susanne, Ojeda, Pedro, Roberts, Graham, Tommerup, Lene, Varga, Eva-Maria and Winnergard, Inger (2011) Design and recruitment for the GAP trial, investigating the preventive effect on asthma development of an SQ-standardized grass allergy immunotherapy tablet in children with grass pollen-induced allergic rhinoconjunctivitis. Clinical Therapeutics, 33 (10), 1537-1546. (doi:10.1016/j.clinthera.2011.09.013). (PMID:21999887)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background
Allergic rhinoconjunctivitis is a risk factor for asthma development. Treating the underlying allergy may represent an attractive method of asthma prevention. No regulatory guidance exists in this area, and, to our knowledge, no clinical investigations meeting modern regulatory standards have been published.

Objective
The objective of this publication is to describe the rationale behind the design of and report on the recruitment for the ongoing pediatric Grazax Asthma Prevention (GAP) trial.

Methods
The trial was designed for assessment of the preventive effect of an SQ-standardized grass allergy immunotherapy tablet (AIT) on asthma development, both during treatment and after the end of treatment. (The standardized quality [SQ] procedure is a standardization procedure comprising 3 components: total potency, major allergen content, and assessment of extract complexity.) The trial design was discussed with several European Competent Authorities.

Results
The GAP trial is a multinational, parallel-group, double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized trial. Main eligibility criteria were age of 5 to 12 years, grass pollen–induced allergic rhinoconjunctivitis, no asthma, and no overlapping symptomatic allergies. The children have been randomized 1:1 to receive the grass AIT or placebo once daily for 3 years, followed by a blinded observational period of 2 years. Asthma is assessed by the investigators according to specific diagnostic criteria, used at screening visits before randomization to exclude children with existing asthma, and evaluated at least half-yearly during the trial. Seven months of screening resulted in 812 randomized children at 101 centers in 11 countries.

Conclusions
To our knowledge, the GAP trial represents the first double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized trial to assess the preventive effect of allergen-specific immunotherapy on asthma development. A total of 812 children were successfully recruited into the trial. EudraCT number: 2009-011235-12.

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More information

Published date: October 2011
Keywords: allergy, asthma, grass, immunotherapy, prevention, tablet
Organisations: Human Development & Health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 351129
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/351129
ISSN: 0149-2918
PURE UUID: 695a8fa7-611a-45f6-b2fc-239b8fc2bc0f
ORCID for Graham Roberts: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2252-1248

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 16 Apr 2013 15:23
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:22

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Contributors

Author: Erkka Valovirta
Author: Aud Katrine Herland Berstad
Author: Jacques de Blic
Author: Albrecht Bufe
Author: Peter Eng
Author: Susanne Halken
Author: Pedro Ojeda
Author: Graham Roberts ORCID iD
Author: Lene Tommerup
Author: Eva-Maria Varga
Author: Inger Winnergard

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