Various chemical modifications of allergens have been attempted to enhance efficacy, improve safety, and foster compliance with IT. These approaches have been unsuccessful - in that the allergenicity and immunogenicity have either decreased, or increased in tandem, with no resultant efficacy: safety benefit ratio. This study utilizes an adjuvant approach in which synthetic immunostimulatory DNA is conjugated to ragweed allergen in an attempt to modulate both the clinical and immunologic allergic response to ragweed exposure in ragweed-allergic patients with seasonal rhinitis.
Evaluation of efficacy and safety of allergen-CpG oligonucleotide immunostimulatory conjugate in treatment of ragweed-induced seasonal allergic rhinitis. Study incorporates clinical outcomes (symptom diaries, medication diaries, visual analog scores, quality of life questionnaires), safety measurements, immunologic assays (antibody measurements, T-cell assays, cytokine assays, nasal provocation).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
25
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Effect of treatment on nasal allergen challenge
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