Documentdetail
ID kaart

oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:1001...

Onderwerp
Review Article
Auteur
Zieglmayer, Petra Zieglmayer, René Lemell, Patrick
Langue
en
Editor

Dustri-Verlag Dr. Karl Feistle

Categorie

Allergologie Select

Jaar

2023

vermelding datum

10-10-2023

Trefwoorden
tests allergen challenge ait
Metriek

Beschrijving

Introduction: Treatment effects in allergen immunotherapy (AIT) studies are based on symptomatic improvement, and evaluations of naturally exposed patients do often show weak efficacy.

Allergen challenge tests, such as conjunctival (CAC), nasal (NAC), or bronchial (BAC) challenge tests, or challenges in allergen exposure chambers (AEC) are accepted by regulators for AIT phase II studies only.

Materials and methods: This review aims to describe different allergen challenge test methods, summarizes safety and limitations for each, and discusses their potential for use in AIT trials.

Results: Organ-specific allergen challenges provide information about individual reactivity, reaction threshold, and organ-specific efficacy of AIT.

AECs, targeting all affected organs simultaneously, were developed to investigate disease mechanisms and treatment effects under controlled and reproducible conditions.

Conclusion: A high level of standardization is existing for NAC only; in CAC and BAC, the toolbox is limited to subjective symptom scoring with no validated objective parameters identified yet.

AECs are complex and heterogenous; correlation of systems and comparability of study data is claimed.

All challenge methods are safe when conducted by experienced staff.

Zieglmayer, Petra,Zieglmayer, René,Lemell, Patrick, 2023, Allergen challenge tests in allergen immunotherapy: State of the art , Dustri-Verlag Dr. Karl Feistle

Delen

Bron

Artikelen aanbevolen door ES/IODE AI

Bone metastasis prediction in non-small-cell lung cancer: primary CT-based radiomics signature and clinical feature
non-small-cell lung cancer bone metastasis radiomics risk factor predict cohort model cect cancer prediction 0 metastasis radiomics clinical