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Annals of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology 2013-Jun

Randomized controlled trial of ragweed allergy immunotherapy tablet efficacy and safety in North American adults.

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Entra registrati
Il collegamento viene salvato negli appunti
Hendrik Nolte
Jacques Hébert
Gary Berman
Sandra Gawchik
Martha White
Amarjot Kaur
Nancy Liu
William Lumry
Jennifer Maloney

Parole chiave

Astratto

BACKGROUND

Ragweed is an important cause of allergic rhinitis with or without conjunctivitis (AR/C) in North America and elsewhere. Allergen immunotherapy enabling safe patient self-administration is considered an unmet clinical need. Allergy immunotherapy tablet (AIT) treatment has shown promising efficacy and safety for grass allergy but has not been assessed for ragweed allergy.

OBJECTIVE

To evaluate efficacy and safety of 2 short ragweed AIT doses in patients with AR/C.

METHODS

Adults with ragweed pollen-induced AR/C were randomized 1:1:1 to daily ragweed AIT (6 or 12 Amb a 1 units) or placebo before, throughout, and after ragweed season (approximately 52 weeks). Patients could use predefined allergy rescue medications in season. Efficacy end points included peak and entire season total combined score (TCS) and its components daily symptom score (DSS), and daily medication score (DMS). Safety assessments included adverse events.

RESULTS

A total of 565 patients were randomized. During peak season, the 6- and 12-Amb a 1 unit ragweed AIT doses showed 21% (-1.76 score) and 27% (-2.24 score) improvement in TCS vs placebo (P < .05). The 6- and 12-Amb a 1 unit AIT doses significantly improved DSS and DMS vs placebo (P < .05). Peak and entire season efficacy were comparable. The 12-Amb a 1 unit AIT dose reduced peak-season TCS vs placebo by 21% and 25% in subgroups with and without local application-site reactions, respectively. Most treatment-related adverse events were mild, oral reactions; no systemic allergic reactions were reported. One patient in the 6-Amb a 1 unit group received epinephrine at an emergency facility for sensation of localized pharyngeal edema.

CONCLUSIONS

In this trial, ragweed AIT was effective and well tolerated in ragweed-allergic North American adults.

BACKGROUND

clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00783198.

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