Abstract

The effect of immunotherapy with aqueous ragweed pollen extract on changes in IgE antibody was analyzed in 40 untreated patients with ragweed hay fever and compared to changes in 63 treated patients. Treated patients received cumulative doses prior to and during treatment ranging from 1.4 × 10 5 to 4.8 × 10 6 protein nitrogen units (PNU). IgG antibody to ragweed antigen E (AgE) was measured by radioimmunoprecipitation, while IgE antibody to allergens in crude ragweed extract was measured by the radioallergosorbent test (RAST). The RAST procedure was calibrated using a serum whose content of IgE antibody in nanograms per milliliter had been determined by immunoabsorption, and with this method the absolute quantities of IgE antibodies to ragweed allergens could be measured. Control experiments indicated that the IgG antibodies in the sera of the treated patients did not interfere with the measurements of IgE antibodies. The levels of IgE antibody in serum varied from less than 5 ng/ml to approximately 3,000 ng/ml. IgE antibodies decreased from October, 1973, to July, 1974, and rose sharply from July to October, 1974, following the pollination season. In both untreated and treated patient groups the magnitudes of the decreases were related (p < 0.001) to the levels of IgE antibody in October, and the magnitudes of the rises were related to the levels of IgE antibody in July. In the treated patients with IgE antibody less than 71 ng/ml in October, the rate of decrease (October to July) was less than in the untreated patients. Comparison of the rises in IgE antibody from July to October revealed that these were partially suppressed in the treated group (p < 0.001), and this effect was most marked in patients with July levels less than 36 ng/ml. Levels of IgG antibody to AgE in the treated patients were approximately 70-fold greater than in untreated patients and showed little change over the study period. The levels of IgG and IgE antibody in the treated patients were positively correlated (p < 0.001) at all time periods, and patients with high levels of IgG antibody also had greater declines and rises in IgE antibodies. The results indicate that immunotherapy is associated with (1) a reduction in the seasonal decrease in IgE antibody from October to July in patients with the low levels of IgE antibody, (2) a partial suppression of the rises in IgE antibody from July to October, and (3) that both these effects are related to the level of IgE antibody before the change. In many treated patients both IgE and IgG antibodies were low in spite of parenteral administration of ragweed extract. This result is consistent with the view that overall humoral immunologic reactivity to ragweed antigens is reduced in these patients.

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