Abstract
Allergen immunotherapy (AIT) is a guidelines-approved, disease-modifying treatment option for respiratory allergies, including allergic rhinitis (AR) induced by pollen. The various AIT regimens employed to date in pollen-induced AR can be classified as continuous (i.e. year-round) or discontinuous (i.e. pre-seasonal alone, co-seasonal alone or pre- and co-seasonal). Pre-and co-seasonal regimens are typically used for sublingual allergen immunotherapy (SLIT) and have economic and compliance advantages over perennial (year-round) regimens. However, these advantages must not come at the expensive of poor efficacy or safety. The results of recent double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trials show that pre- and co-seasonal SLIT is safe and effective in patients with AR induced by grass pollen (treated with a tablet formulation) or by birch pollen (treated with a liquid formulation). Progress in SLIT has been made in defining the optimal dose of major allergen, the administration frequency (daily), the duration of pre-seasonal treatment (four months) and the number of treatment seasons (at least three). Post-marketing, “real-life” trials of pre- and co-seasonal birch or grass pollen SLIT regimens have confirmed the efficacy and safety observed in the clinical trials. In the treatment of pollen-induced AR, pre- and co-seasonal SLIT regimens appear to be at least as effective and safe as perennial SLIT regimens, and are associated with lower costs and good compliance. Good compliance may mean that pre- and co-seasonal SLIT regimens are inherently more effective and safer than perennial SLIT regimens. When considering the pre- and co-seasonal discontinuous regimen in particular, a 300 IR five-grass-pollen formulation is the only SLIT tablet with a clinical development programme having provided evidence of short-term, sustained and post-treatment efficacy.
Highlights
Allergen immunotherapy (AIT) is a guidelines-approved, disease-modifying treatment option for respiratory allergies, including allergic rhinitis (AR) induced by pollen
Setting aside the allergen build-up phase, subcutaneous immunotherapy (SCIT) is generally administered via a continuous, year-round maintenance regimen in which injections performed in a medically supervised setting at regular intervals for several years and over several pollen periods (Figure 1) [22])
Data from 934 patients treated with the 75,000 standardized quality tablet (SQ-T) single-grass sublingual allergen immunotherapy (SLIT) tablet have been used to show that at least 2 months of pre-seasonal treatment are required for clinical efficacy [54]
Summary
Allergen immunotherapy (AIT) is a guidelines-approved, disease-modifying treatment option for respiratory allergies, including allergic rhinitis (AR) induced by pollen. Over the last 10 years, the safety and/or efficacy of pre-seasonal and co-seasonal treatment with a novel, 300 IR five-grass-pollen SLIT tablet has been unambiguously demonstrated in a series of pre- and post-marketing clinical trials in adult and paediatric populations [39].
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have