4.4 Article

Birch-induced allergic rhinitis: Results of exposure during nasal allergen challenge, environmental chamber, and pollen season

Journal

WORLD ALLERGY ORGANIZATION JOURNAL
Volume 16, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.waojou.2023.100801

Keywords

Birch allergy; Allergic rhinitis; Nasal allergen challenge; Environmental exposure chamber; Birch pollen

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study aimed to investigate birch induced allergic rhinitis under 3 different conditions and found that the outcomes in environmental exposure chambers (EECs) were similar to those obtained with nasal allergen challenge (NAC) and natural exposure, suggesting the usefulness of EEC in allergic rhinitis studies.
Background: Pollen variation can affect field study data quality. Nasal allergen challenge (NAC) is considered the gold standard for evaluating allergic rhinitis, while environmental exposure chambers (EECs) are mainly used in phase 2 drug development studies. We aimed to study birch induced allergic rhinitis under 3 different conditions.Methods: This study included 30 participants allergic to birch pollen, based on birch skin prick test, specific immunoglobulin E (IgE), and positive NAC. Participants were exposed to placebo twice, followed by 2 consecutive 4-h birch airborne exposures, repeated on 2 occasions to evaluate reproducibility and priming effect. Nasal response was defined as total corrected nasal symptom score (DTNSS) > 5 during NAC and EEC. The primary end-point was to measure TNSS during the last 2 h of first allergen exposure. TNSS was also analyzed during natural exposure.Results: The dose most commonly yielding positive TNSS during NAC was 175.2 ng/200 mL. Eighteen participants experienced DTNSS >5 during the last 2 h of the first exposure, whereas 21 had positive responses at all 4 exposures. Mean DTNSS was 1 with placebo versus 6 with birch. Exposures were reproducible, with no observed priming effect. Airborne Bet v 1 was 25 ng/m3, while the pollen measurement was 279/m3 during pollen season. TNSS reached 5 in 67.9% of participants during peak pollen season.Conclusion: EEC outcomes were similar to those obtained with NAC and natural exposure, suggesting the usefulness of EEC in allergic rhinitis studies. The primary end-point was reached, as 60% of participants experienced nasal responses.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available