Safety of specific sublingual immunotherapy with SQ standardized grass allergen tablets in children.

Standard

Safety of specific sublingual immunotherapy with SQ standardized grass allergen tablets in children. / Ibañez, Maria Dolores; Kaiser, Friedrich; Knecht, Rainald; Armentia, Alicia; Schöpfer, Helmut; Tholstrup, Bente; Bufe, Albrecht.

In: PEDIAT ALLERG IMM-UK, Vol. 18, No. 6, 6, 2007, p. 516-522.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ibañez, MD, Kaiser, F, Knecht, R, Armentia, A, Schöpfer, H, Tholstrup, B & Bufe, A 2007, 'Safety of specific sublingual immunotherapy with SQ standardized grass allergen tablets in children.', PEDIAT ALLERG IMM-UK, vol. 18, no. 6, 6, pp. 516-522. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17680910?dopt=Citation>

APA

Ibañez, M. D., Kaiser, F., Knecht, R., Armentia, A., Schöpfer, H., Tholstrup, B., & Bufe, A. (2007). Safety of specific sublingual immunotherapy with SQ standardized grass allergen tablets in children. PEDIAT ALLERG IMM-UK, 18(6), 516-522. [6]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17680910?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Ibañez MD, Kaiser F, Knecht R, Armentia A, Schöpfer H, Tholstrup B et al. Safety of specific sublingual immunotherapy with SQ standardized grass allergen tablets in children. PEDIAT ALLERG IMM-UK. 2007;18(6):516-522. 6.

Bibtex

@article{b94d6b65d5d34b5fb17ede986c67e6e1,
title = "Safety of specific sublingual immunotherapy with SQ standardized grass allergen tablets in children.",
abstract = "The aim of the study was to confirm the safety of an orodispersible grass allergen tablet 75,000 SQ-T (Grazax, ALK-Abell{\'o} A/S, H{\o}rsholm, Denmark) in children aged 5-12 yr. The study was randomized, double-blinded and placebo-controlled. Sixty children aged 5-12 yr suffering from grass pollen-induced rhinoconjunctivitis (with or without asthma) from five centres in two countries (three in Germany and two in Spain) participated in the study. They were randomized at the ratio of 3:1 as receiving either Grazax or placebo tablet given sublingually once daily for 28 days outside the grass pollen season. A total of 810 treatment-related adverse events were reported in the Grazax group. The majority of these were local reactions in the mouth or throat and were mostly mild (71%) to moderate (27%) in severity and resolved within days. Thirty-five (78%) subjects treated with Grazax and five (33%) treated with placebo reported at least one treatment-related adverse event. Oral pruritus, throat irritation, mouth oedema and ear pruritus appeared as the most frequently reported treatment-related adverse events. 62% (28 of 45) of the actively treated subjects reported oral pruritus, 36% (16 of 45) throat irritation, 31% (14 of 45) mouth oedema and 22% (10 of 45) ear pruritus. Two actively treated subjects withdrew from the study: one subject due to four adverse events (moderate eye pruritus, moderate pharyngolaryngeal pain, moderate non-cardiac chest pain and moderate dysphagia) and one subject due to a serious adverse event (asthmatic attack). The subjects recovered completely from the events. In conclusion, in the present study, Grazax was in general tolerated in a paediatric population and considered suitable for further clinical investigations in children.",
author = "Iba{\~n}ez, {Maria Dolores} and Friedrich Kaiser and Rainald Knecht and Alicia Armentia and Helmut Sch{\"o}pfer and Bente Tholstrup and Albrecht Bufe",
year = "2007",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "18",
pages = "516--522",
journal = "PEDIAT ALLERG IMM-UK",
issn = "0905-6157",
publisher = "Blackwell Munksgaard",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Safety of specific sublingual immunotherapy with SQ standardized grass allergen tablets in children.

AU - Ibañez, Maria Dolores

AU - Kaiser, Friedrich

AU - Knecht, Rainald

AU - Armentia, Alicia

AU - Schöpfer, Helmut

AU - Tholstrup, Bente

AU - Bufe, Albrecht

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - The aim of the study was to confirm the safety of an orodispersible grass allergen tablet 75,000 SQ-T (Grazax, ALK-Abelló A/S, Hørsholm, Denmark) in children aged 5-12 yr. The study was randomized, double-blinded and placebo-controlled. Sixty children aged 5-12 yr suffering from grass pollen-induced rhinoconjunctivitis (with or without asthma) from five centres in two countries (three in Germany and two in Spain) participated in the study. They were randomized at the ratio of 3:1 as receiving either Grazax or placebo tablet given sublingually once daily for 28 days outside the grass pollen season. A total of 810 treatment-related adverse events were reported in the Grazax group. The majority of these were local reactions in the mouth or throat and were mostly mild (71%) to moderate (27%) in severity and resolved within days. Thirty-five (78%) subjects treated with Grazax and five (33%) treated with placebo reported at least one treatment-related adverse event. Oral pruritus, throat irritation, mouth oedema and ear pruritus appeared as the most frequently reported treatment-related adverse events. 62% (28 of 45) of the actively treated subjects reported oral pruritus, 36% (16 of 45) throat irritation, 31% (14 of 45) mouth oedema and 22% (10 of 45) ear pruritus. Two actively treated subjects withdrew from the study: one subject due to four adverse events (moderate eye pruritus, moderate pharyngolaryngeal pain, moderate non-cardiac chest pain and moderate dysphagia) and one subject due to a serious adverse event (asthmatic attack). The subjects recovered completely from the events. In conclusion, in the present study, Grazax was in general tolerated in a paediatric population and considered suitable for further clinical investigations in children.

AB - The aim of the study was to confirm the safety of an orodispersible grass allergen tablet 75,000 SQ-T (Grazax, ALK-Abelló A/S, Hørsholm, Denmark) in children aged 5-12 yr. The study was randomized, double-blinded and placebo-controlled. Sixty children aged 5-12 yr suffering from grass pollen-induced rhinoconjunctivitis (with or without asthma) from five centres in two countries (three in Germany and two in Spain) participated in the study. They were randomized at the ratio of 3:1 as receiving either Grazax or placebo tablet given sublingually once daily for 28 days outside the grass pollen season. A total of 810 treatment-related adverse events were reported in the Grazax group. The majority of these were local reactions in the mouth or throat and were mostly mild (71%) to moderate (27%) in severity and resolved within days. Thirty-five (78%) subjects treated with Grazax and five (33%) treated with placebo reported at least one treatment-related adverse event. Oral pruritus, throat irritation, mouth oedema and ear pruritus appeared as the most frequently reported treatment-related adverse events. 62% (28 of 45) of the actively treated subjects reported oral pruritus, 36% (16 of 45) throat irritation, 31% (14 of 45) mouth oedema and 22% (10 of 45) ear pruritus. Two actively treated subjects withdrew from the study: one subject due to four adverse events (moderate eye pruritus, moderate pharyngolaryngeal pain, moderate non-cardiac chest pain and moderate dysphagia) and one subject due to a serious adverse event (asthmatic attack). The subjects recovered completely from the events. In conclusion, in the present study, Grazax was in general tolerated in a paediatric population and considered suitable for further clinical investigations in children.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 18

SP - 516

EP - 522

JO - PEDIAT ALLERG IMM-UK

JF - PEDIAT ALLERG IMM-UK

SN - 0905-6157

IS - 6

M1 - 6

ER -