The aim of this clinical trial is to show safety and efficacy of the allergoid preparation of birch pollen allergens in the treatment of birch allergic patients in a representative number of patients.
Type I allergy is an immune-disorder which stems from the formation of IgE antibodies against proteins and glycoproteins from plants, insects, animals and fungi, most of which for healthy subjects are considered to be harmless. However, in allergic patients the cross-linking of specific IgE-antibodies on effector cells by allergens activates an immunological cascade leading to the symptoms of Type I allergy including rhinitis, conjunctivitis, asthma, and anaphylactic shock. Pollens from wind-pollinated plants including trees, grasses and weeds, are amongst the most frequent and potent elicitors of Type I allergy. It is not possible to avoid exposure to these pollens and therefore the symptoms that patients inevitably suffer must be treated with either symptomatic medication or allergen specific immunotherapy. The Betulaceae family includes the genera Alnus (alder), Betula (birch) and Corylus (hazel). Trees belonging to these genera are widespread in middle and northern Europe and, in combination with the fact that they shed large quantities of wind-borne pollen, leads to their allergenic significance. The prevalence of sensitisation to birch pollen has been studied, and in the case of a middle European (Viennese) population, for example, it has been demonstrated that approximately 40 % of patients with allergic rhinitis are sensitised. Although the pollen season for any one genera seldom lasts for more than a few weeks, the well-documented cross-reactivity between the different Betulaceae and other tree pollens of the Fagales order contributes to a protracted season of symptoms for many allergic patients. Allergoids are prepared by chemical modification of partially purified native aqueous aller-gen extracts. Native allergen extracts are depleted of components with a molecular mass of less than 5000 Dalton by diafiltration prior to chemical modification with aldehydes. The modification causes a substantial reduction in the allergenicity of the extract as can be judged by skin prick testing, provocation testing, histamine release from sensitised leukocytes and measurement of IgE-binding activity by RAST-inhibition. However, immunogenic activity and T-cell reactivity are retained. These properties enable allergoids to be used as a basis for allergen specific immunotherapy with a reduced risk of inducing IgE-mediated side-reactions and the possibility of administering larger doses of immunogen over a shorter time course than with native allergens.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
253
Subcutaneous injections were applied in the upper arm. Vials with three different concentrations were used: Strength A (1000 TU/mL), strength B (10 000 TU/mL) and strength 0 (100 TU/mL) by dilution of strength A.
Sterile aluminium hydroxide suspension for subcutaneous injection were applied in the upper arm. Vials with strength A contained 0.0125 mg/mL and with strength B 0.125 mg/mL histamine-dihydrochloride and strength 0 was produced by dilution of strength A. The vials containing the placebo solution were identical in their outer appearance with the active study preparation of the birch pollen allergoids.
Allergopharma Joachim Ganzer KG
Reinbek, Germany
Symptom Medication Score (SMS)
The primary endpoint was the area under the curve (AUC) of the daily sum of the Symptom Medication Score (SMS) after two years of double-blind treatment. Each patient recorded the information used for deriving the SMS over a period of eight to twelve weeks during the two double-blind pollen seasons in 2006 and 2007.
Time frame: over a period of eight to twelve weeks during the two pollen seasons in
Adverse events (AEs)
Safety: (all five years of treatment) occurrence of adverse events (AEs).
Time frame: Entrire study period.
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