Results from the 5-year SQ grass sublingual immunotherapy tablet asthma prevention (GAP) trial in children with grass pollen allergy

Erkka Valovirta(University of Turku), Thomas Houmann Petersen(Kolding Hospital), Teresa Piotrowska(NZOZ Centrum Alergologii), Mette K. Laursen(ALK-Abelló (Denmark)), Jens Andersen(ALK-Abelló (Denmark)), Helle F. Sørensen(ALK-Abelló (Denmark)), Rabih Klink, Eva‐Maria Varga, Isidor Huttegger, Lone Agertoft, Susanne Halken, Merete Jørgensen, L. G. Hansen, Roswitha Cronjäger, Kirsten Hansen, Thomas Houmann Petersen(Kolding Hospital), Sune Rubak, Erkka Valovirta(University of Turku), Péter Csonka(Kolding Hospital), Ove Mickelsson, J. de Blic, N. Pham Thi, L. Réfabert, Christine Pasquet, A. Broué-Chabbert, Agnès Juchet, Bruno Lebeaupin, François Durand-Perdriel, F. Wessel, F. Payot, B. Girodet, Jean-Marc Houssel, Sylvie-Anne André-Gomez, Françoise Riotte-Flandrois, Dominique Basset, Dominique Mounier, Marie Noëlle Robberecht, Laure Delbecque, Rabih Klink, Jean‐Luc Fauquert, A. Prudhomme, Annick Auffret, Béatrice Luet-Gautier, Montserrat Agell Perello, Fabrice Bouillot, Albrecht Bufe, Andrea von Berg, Monika Gappa, Christian Vogelberg, Eckhard Hamelmann, Suzanne Schuh, Volker Stephan, Peter Eberle(Kolding Hospital), Raffi Bedikian, Peter Bosch(Kolding Hospital), Jutta Christmann, E. Franke, Marcus Dahlheim, Friedrich Kaiser, Roland Knecht, B Sandner, Christine Gronke, Ralph Köllges, Eivy Franke-Beckmann, Ludger Klimek, Matthias Hoffmann, Ingrid Bretschneider, Aud Katrine Herland Berstad, Bente Kvenshagen, Knut Øymar, Bjarne Dag Andersen(ALK-Abelló (Denmark)), E Kolsrud, Anne Søyland, Andrzej Dyczek, Juliusz Bokiej, T Hofman(NZOZ Centrum Alergologii), Ewa Springer, Maria Zofia Lisiecka, Anna Madaj, Teresa Piotrowska(NZOZ Centrum Alergologii), Ewa Trębas-Pietraś, Krzysztof Wytrychowski, Malgorzata Zurowska Żurowska-Gębala, Danuta Moszyńska, A Kwaśniewski, Pedro Ojeda, Ma Dolores Ibáñez, M Cimarra, Sonsoles Infante, Santiago Quirce, Eloina González, A. E. M. Vega, Carmen Panizo, Ana I. Tabar, Carmen Vidal, Alicia Alonso Gómez, Beatriz Fernández Parra, Inger Winnergård, Hampus Kiotseridis, P. Söderman, Johan Alm, Jan-Åke Jönsson, Anders Berner(ALK-Abelló (Denmark)), Östen Jonsson, Lennart Nilsson, Alice Koehli-Wiesner, Peter Schmid‐Grendelmeier(Kolding Hospital), Peter Eng(Kolding Hospital), Graham Roberts, Rajiv Sood, Adam Fox, Adnan Čustović
Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
July 6, 2017
Cited by 335Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Allergy immunotherapy targets the immunological cause of allergic rhinoconjunctivitis and allergic asthma and has the potential to alter the natural course of allergic disease. OBJECTIVE: The primary objective was to investigate the effect of the SQ grass sublingual immunotherapy tablet compared with placebo on the risk of developing asthma. METHODS: A total of 812 children (5-12 years), with a clinically relevant history of grass pollen allergic rhinoconjunctivitis and no medical history or signs of asthma, were included in the randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, comprising 3 years of treatment and 2 years of follow-up. RESULTS: There was no difference in time to onset of asthma, defined by prespecified asthma criteria relying on documented reversible impairment of lung function (primary endpoint). Treatment with the SQ grass sublingual immunotherapy tablet significantly reduced the risk of experiencing asthma symptoms or using asthma medication at the end of trial (odds ratio = 0.66, P < .036), during the 2-year posttreatment follow-up, and during the entire 5-year trial period. Also, grass allergic rhinoconjunctivitis symptoms were 22% to 30% reduced (P < .005 for all 5 years). At the end of the trial, the use of allergic rhinoconjunctivitis pharmacotherapy was significantly less (27% relative difference to placebo, P < .001). Total IgE, grass pollen-specific IgE, and skin prick test reactivity to grass pollen were all reduced compared to placebo. CONCLUSIONS: Treatment with the SQ grass sublingual immunotherapy tablet reduced the risk of experiencing asthma symptoms and using asthma medication, and had a positive, long-term clinical effect on rhinoconjunctivitis symptoms and medication use but did not show an effect on the time to onset of asthma.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis