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The allergen specificity of the late asthmatic reaction

The allergen specificity of the late asthmatic reaction
The allergen specificity of the late asthmatic reaction
BACKGROUND: Allergen inhalation challenge in asthma may induce both early (EAR) and late (LAR) asthmatic reactions. The EAR is IgE and mast cell dependent. The mechanism of the LAR is less well defined and we have hypothesized may be allergen dependent. The aim of this study was to investigate the allergen specificity of the LAR to allergen inhalation in asthma.

METHODS: In a randomized, double-blind, crossover design six asthmatic volunteers with dual sensitization to house dust mite (HDM) allergen and grass pollen (GP) allergen underwent inhalation allergen challenge with these separate allergens on two occasions separated by 14 days. Lung function changes were followed for 8-h postchallenge. Bronchial reactivity (histamine PC(20)) and airway inflammation, assessed by induced sputum differential cell count, were measured 24-h pre and postallergen challenge. The allergen inhalation challenges were matched to achieve the same magnitude of EAR.

RESULTS: Despite comparable group mean EAR percent falls in FEV(1) (25.8% following GP and 28.0% following HDM (P = 0.917), the LAR was statistically greater on the HDM challenge day (13.0%vs 22.8% [P = 0.046]) and was associated with a significant airway eosinophil recruitment (mean (SD) of 5.4 (4.8)% to 22.1 (18.2)% (P = 0.028) that was not evident on the GP allergen challenge day.

CONCLUSIONS: These findings identify the allergen specificity of the LAR and indicate that factors independent of IgE contribute to the LAR. Such findings have relevance both to the understanding of the allergen-induced airway responses in asthma and the need for homogeneity in inhaled-allergen challenge studies in asthma.
allergen challenge, asthma, chitin, house dust mite, late reaction
0105-4538
355-358
Hatzivlassiou, M.
d03c961d-835e-49db-8d1c-0ccc035c8c4c
Grainge, Christopher
a83145e5-cfaf-4dae-a6d8-fb225f460136
Kehagia, V.
170c3b61-da9d-4069-8cf5-3fdf5ccdf5aa
Lau, L.
2af8045d-6162-4939-aba7-28dd2f60f6a8
Howarth, P.H.
ff19c8c4-86b0-4a88-8f76-b3d87f142a21
Hatzivlassiou, M.
d03c961d-835e-49db-8d1c-0ccc035c8c4c
Grainge, Christopher
a83145e5-cfaf-4dae-a6d8-fb225f460136
Kehagia, V.
170c3b61-da9d-4069-8cf5-3fdf5ccdf5aa
Lau, L.
2af8045d-6162-4939-aba7-28dd2f60f6a8
Howarth, P.H.
ff19c8c4-86b0-4a88-8f76-b3d87f142a21

Hatzivlassiou, M., Grainge, Christopher, Kehagia, V., Lau, L. and Howarth, P.H. (2010) The allergen specificity of the late asthmatic reaction. Allergy, 65 (3), 355-358. (doi:10.1111/j.1398-9995.2009.02184.x). (PMID:19804443)

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Allergen inhalation challenge in asthma may induce both early (EAR) and late (LAR) asthmatic reactions. The EAR is IgE and mast cell dependent. The mechanism of the LAR is less well defined and we have hypothesized may be allergen dependent. The aim of this study was to investigate the allergen specificity of the LAR to allergen inhalation in asthma.

METHODS: In a randomized, double-blind, crossover design six asthmatic volunteers with dual sensitization to house dust mite (HDM) allergen and grass pollen (GP) allergen underwent inhalation allergen challenge with these separate allergens on two occasions separated by 14 days. Lung function changes were followed for 8-h postchallenge. Bronchial reactivity (histamine PC(20)) and airway inflammation, assessed by induced sputum differential cell count, were measured 24-h pre and postallergen challenge. The allergen inhalation challenges were matched to achieve the same magnitude of EAR.

RESULTS: Despite comparable group mean EAR percent falls in FEV(1) (25.8% following GP and 28.0% following HDM (P = 0.917), the LAR was statistically greater on the HDM challenge day (13.0%vs 22.8% [P = 0.046]) and was associated with a significant airway eosinophil recruitment (mean (SD) of 5.4 (4.8)% to 22.1 (18.2)% (P = 0.028) that was not evident on the GP allergen challenge day.

CONCLUSIONS: These findings identify the allergen specificity of the LAR and indicate that factors independent of IgE contribute to the LAR. Such findings have relevance both to the understanding of the allergen-induced airway responses in asthma and the need for homogeneity in inhaled-allergen challenge studies in asthma.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 5 October 2009
Published date: March 2010
Keywords: allergen challenge, asthma, chitin, house dust mite, late reaction

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 72795
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/72795
ISSN: 0105-4538
PURE UUID: 9d39fb36-38da-4209-b10e-9f3ba0928eb8

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 23 Feb 2010
Last modified: 13 Mar 2024 21:40

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Contributors

Author: M. Hatzivlassiou
Author: Christopher Grainge
Author: V. Kehagia
Author: L. Lau
Author: P.H. Howarth

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