Preseasonal local allergoid immunotherapy to grass pollen in children: a double‐blind, placebo‐controlled, randomized trial

Abstract
Background: We assessed the efficacy of preseasonal local allergoid immunotherapy in a group of children with asthma and/or rhinitis and/or rhinoconjunctivitis due to grass pollen. Methods: We randomly assigned 24 children allergic to grass pollen to receivelocal allergoid immunotherapy for 3 months before the pollen season and 24 such patients to receive identically appearing placebo. The immunotherapy consisted of tablets of monomeric allergoid grass pollen allergens held in the mouth until they dissolved and then swallowed. The study was double‐blind. Symptoms and medications were scored on diary cards during the pollen season. Nasal eosinophil cationic protein levels were measured by the monoclonal antibodies EG1 and EG2 outside the pollen season and at low and at high pollen concentration during the pollen season. Results: The active‐treatment group had a statistically significant reduction of total symptoms (PPP<0.01). Conclusions: Our results suggest that this immunotherapy is effective for the treatment of asthma due to grass pollen in children.

This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit: