4.6 Article

High dose pollen intralymphatic immunotherapy: Two RDBPC trials question the benefit of dose increase

Journal

ALLERGY
Volume 77, Issue 3, Pages 883-896

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/all.15042

Keywords

clinical immunology; immunotherapy and tolerance induction; pollen; rhinitis

Funding

  1. Stiftelsen Acta Oto-Laryngologica
  2. Ellen, Walter and Lennart Hesselman Foundation for Scientific Research
  3. Stockholms Lans Landsting
  4. Vetenskapsradet
  5. Astma-och Allergiforbundet

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The study found that high-dose ILIT after recent SCIT may further reduce grass pollen-induced seasonal symptoms, but caution is needed when up-dosing in de novo ILIT.
Background The same dosing schedule, 1000 SQ-U times three, with one-month intervals, have been evaluated in most trials of intralymphatic immunotherapy (ILIT) for the treatment of allergic rhinitis (AR). The present studies evaluated if a dose escalation in ILIT can enhance the clinical and immunological effects, without compromising safety. Methods Two randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trials of ILIT for grass pollen-induced AR were performed. The first included 29 patients that had recently ended 3 years of SCIT and the second contained 39 not previously vaccinated patients. An up-dosage of 1000-3000-10,000 (5000 + 5000 with 30 minutes apart) SQ-U with 1 month in between was evaluated. Results Doses up to 10,000 SQ-U were safe after recent SCIT. The combined symptom-medication scores (CSMS) were reduced by 31% and the grass-specific IgG4 levels in blood were doubled. In ILIT de novo, the two first patients that received active treatment developed serious adverse reactions at 5000 SQ-U. A modified up-dosing schedule; 1000-3000-3000 SQ-U appeared to be safe but failed to improve the CSMS. Flow cytometry analyses showed increased activation of lymph node-derived dendritic but not T cells. Quality of life and nasal provocation response did not improve in any study. Conclusion Intralymphatic immunotherapy in high doses after SCIT appears to further reduce grass pollen-induced seasonal symptoms and may be considered as an add-on treatment for patients that do not reach full symptom control after SCIT. Up-dosing schedules de novo with three monthly injections that exceeds 3000 SQ-U should be avoided.

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