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Review
. 2005 May;35(5):565-71.
doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2222.2005.02240.x.

The safety of sublingual-swallow immunotherapy: an analysis of published studies

Affiliations
Review

The safety of sublingual-swallow immunotherapy: an analysis of published studies

G B Gidaro et al. Clin Exp Allergy. 2005 May.

Abstract

Background: As the main target of sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) is to reduce at most the occurrence of adverse events (AE), safety represents a critical issue. This aspect deserves particular mention when a higher dose of allergen extract than traditional subcutaneous immunotherapy (SCIT) is required to be effective: that may be up to 500 times that employed for SCIT.

Objective: All published controlled studies concerning SLIT-swallow were analysed to evaluate AE rates.

Methods: Studies were subdivided in two groups: (i) studies using low allergen dose (LAD), i.e. ranging from 1 to 50 times the dose commonly administered with SCIT, and (ii) studies with high allergen dose (HAD), i.e. ranging from 50 to 500 times the dose administered with SCIT.

Results: Twenty-five studies were altogether analysed: 13 studies belonged to the low-dose group, 12 belonged to the high-dose group. We considered all patients with at least one AE. Local reactions were significantly more frequent in the LAD group than in the HAD group (P<0.0001), while there was no difference in the rate of systemic reactions. Severe systemic reactions were never reported.

Conclusion: This study represents the first analysis of the safety of SLIT concerning the allergen dose employed in the treatment. There is evidence that AE occurrence is substantially not dose-dependent. This fact highlights two main clinical aspects: the elevated tolerability of SLIT in general and the safety of HAD regimen.

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