Food allergy is a major public health problem, for which there is no effective treatment. We examined the immunological changes that occurred in a group of children with significant cow's milk allergy undergoing a novel and rapid high-dose oral desensitization protocol enabled by treatment with omalizumab (anti-immunoglobulin (Ig)E monoclonal antibodies). Within a week of treatment, the CD4+ T-cell response to milk was nearly eliminated, suggesting anergy in, or deletion of, milk-specific CD4+ T cells. Over the following 3 months while the subjects remained on high doses of daily oral milk, the CD4+ T-cell response returned, characterized by a shift from interleukin-4 to interferon-γ production. Desensitization was also associated with reduction in milk-specific IgE and a 15-fold increase in milk-specific IgG4. These studies suggest that high-dose oral allergen desensitization may be associated with deletion of allergen-specific T cells, without the apparent development of allergen-specific Foxp3+ regulatory T cells. © 2012 Society for Mucosal Immunology.
CITATION STYLE
Bedoret, D., Singh, A. K., Shaw, V., Hoyte, E. G., Hamilton, R., DeKruyff, R. H., … Umetsu, D. T. (2012). Changes in antigen-specific T-cell number and function during oral desensitization in cow’s milk allergy enabled with omalizumab. Mucosal Immunology, 5(3), 267–276. https://doi.org/10.1038/mi.2012.5
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