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. 1999 Dec;29(12):1641-7.
doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2222.1999.00671.x.

Immunohistochemical investigation of the cellular infiltrates at the sites of allergoid-induced late-phase cutaneous reactions associated with pollen allergen-specific immunotherapy

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Immunohistochemical investigation of the cellular infiltrates at the sites of allergoid-induced late-phase cutaneous reactions associated with pollen allergen-specific immunotherapy

B Eberlein-König et al. Clin Exp Allergy. 1999 Dec.

Abstract

Background: Reduction in the size of the allergen-induced late-phase reaction (LPR) is seen as a consequence of successful allergen specific immunotherapy.

Objective: It was the aim of this study to characterize the cellular infiltrate at the sites of cutaneous LPR that may occur following injection of a depot pollen allergoid (Allergovit(R)) during immunotherapy and thereby determine the immunological nature of the response.

Methods: Punch biopsies were taken 24 h after subcutaneous injection of a depot pollen allergoid from eight patients that showed LPR and a further five patients that did not. Additional biopsies taken 24 h after injection of allergoid-free depot in the same patients served as controls. Immunoenzymatic labelling of the cryostat sections with different antibodies was performed with the APAAP technique. Results were expressed as cells/field (400 x magnification).

Results: Similar dermal cellular infiltrations were seen following depot allergoid injections in patients both with and without LPR. Patients with LPR showed statistically significant increases in total cells, CD4+ cells, CD11c+ cells, CD45RO+ cells, CD45RB+ cells and activated eosinophils at the reactions sites as compared with control sites. In patients without LPR CD11c+ cells, HLA-DR+ cells and CD45RA+ T cells increased significantly. CD8+, CD1a+, NP57+, CD23+ and CD25+ cells did not differ significantly in either group.

Conclusion: These results indicate that activation of T cells, monocytes/macrophages and eosinophils at the sites of LPR following injection of depot allergoid are comparable with those following injection of allergen. Even in the absence of a cutaneous LPR, subsets of T cells and monocytes/macrophages increased. These cell activations may reflect events associated with the mechanisms of allergoid-based specific immunotherapy, and suggest that at least part of the late-phase reaction may be independent of IgE.

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