Published 2018
| Version v1
Publication
A critical appraisal on AIT in childhood asthma
Description
Abstract: Allergen immunotherapy (AIT) is the only disease-modifying treatment approved for allergic rhinitis and
allergic asthma and represents a suitable therapeutic option, especially in childhood, to modify the progression of
respiratory allergic diseases. Starting from the previous "generic class efect" evaluation, as testifed by the numerous
meta analyses, AIT is now considered a product-specifc pathogenic-oriented treatment.
Background: AIT was empirically proposed more than one century ago in the subcutaneous form (SCIT), but the
IgE-mediated mechanism of allergy was elucidated only after 50 years of clinical use of the treatment. The sublingual
administration (SLIT) was developed during the 1980 ties, to achieve an improvement in safety and convenience.
While SCIT is approved in the United States for the treatment of asthmatic patients with more than 12 years, so far
few trials evaluated the clinical efcacy and safety of SLIT in children with allergic asthma, although the indications
and some aspects remain unclear. Certainly, due to compliance problems, the age below 3 years may be reasonably
considered a practical contraindication.
Conclusions: Given that some specifc AIT products are efective and approved as drugs (AIFA, EMA, FDA), the use
in children is still debated. Some aspects still need robust confrm: (a) the safety of AIT in asthma; (b) the optimal regimen of administration; (c) the role of AIT as preventative treatment for asthma development.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/920483
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/920483
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE