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Title: Allergen-specific T-cell tolerance induction with allergen-derived long synthetic peptides: results of a phase I trial. Author: Fellrath JM, Kettner A, Dufour N, Frigerio C, Schneeberger D, Leimgruber A, Corradin G, Spertini F. Journal: J Allergy Clin Immunol; 2003 Apr; 111(4):854-61. PubMed ID: 12704369. Abstract: BACKGROUND: There is a need to improve the safety and efficacy of allergen-specific immunotherapy. Long synthetic peptide-based immunotherapy was proven safe, immunogenic, and protective in preclinical trials. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of an allergen-derived long synthetic overlapping peptide (LSP) immunotherapy, we designed a double-blind, placebo-controlled phase I clinical trial in patients hypersensitive to bee venom. METHODS: Patients from the active group were injected at day 0 with a mixture of 3 LSPs mapping the entire PLA2 molecule, a major bee venom allergen, in a dose-escalating protocol to a maintenance dose of 100 microg per peptide repeated at days 4, 7, 14, 42, and 70. The control group was injected with human albumin. RESULTS: Whereas specific T-cell proliferation in the peptide group increased up to day 14, a sharp decline was observed thereafter, ending in specific T-cell hyporesponsiveness at day 80. Serum-specific IgG4 response was enhanced, in contrast to anti-PLA2 IgE. Specific T-cell cytokine modulation was marked by increased IL-10 and IFN-gamma secretion. LSP injections were well tolerated in all patients except for mild, late allergic reactions in 2 patients at day 70. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this short-term study demonstrate that LSP-based allergen immunotherapy was safe and able to induce T(H)1-type immune deviation, allergen-specific IL-10 production, and T-cell hyporesponsiveness. LSPs, which offer the advantage of covering all possible T-cell epitopes for any HLA genotype, can be considered candidates for a novel and safe approach of specific immunotherapy.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]