Intranasal administration of allergen increases specific IgE whereas intranasal omalizumab does not increase serum IgE levels—A pilot study

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Abstract

Background: Administration of the therapeutic anti-IgE antibody omalizumab to patients induces strong increases in IgE antibody levels. Objective: To investigate the effect of intranasal administration of major birch pollen allergen Bet v 1, omalizumab or placebo on the levels of total and allergen-specific IgE in patients with birch pollen allergy. Methods: Based on the fact that intranasal allergen application induces rises of systemic allergen-specific IgE, we performed a double-blind placebo-controlled pilot trial in which birch pollen allergic subjects were challenged intranasally with omalizumab, placebo or birch pollen allergen Bet v 1. Total and allergen-specific IgE, IgG and basophil sensitivity were measured before and 8 weeks after challenge. For control purposes, total, allergen-specific IgE levels and omalizumab-IgE complexes as well as specific IgG levels were studied in subjects treated subcutaneously with either omalizumab or placebo. Effects of omalizumab on IgE production by IL-4/anti-CD40-treated PBMCs from allergic patients were studied in vitro. Results: Intranasal challenge with Bet v 1 induced increases in Bet v 1-specific IgE levels by a median of 59.2%, and this change differed significantly from the other treatment groups (P =.016). No relevant change in allergen-specific and total IgE levels was observed in subjects challenged with omalizumab. Addition of omalizumab did not enhance IL-4/anti-CD40-induced IgE production in vitro. Significant rises in total IgE (mean IgE before: 131.83 kU/L to mean IgE after: 505.23 kU/L) and the presence of IgE-omalizumab complexes were observed after subcutaneous administration of omalizumab. Conclusion: Intranasal administration of allergen induced rises of allergen-specific IgE levels, whereas intranasal administration of omalizumab did not enhance systemic total or allergen-specific IgE levels.

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Eckl-Dorna, J., Fröschl, R., Lupinek, C., Kiss, R., Gattinger, P., Marth, K., … Niederberger, V. (2018). Intranasal administration of allergen increases specific IgE whereas intranasal omalizumab does not increase serum IgE levels—A pilot study. Allergy: European Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 73(5), 1003–1012. https://doi.org/10.1111/all.13343

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