Description | Effect of intradermal immunotherapy (IDIT) injections on gene expression profiles of activated T cells derived from skin biopsy explants - GSE72324 |
Purpose | Repeated intradermal injection of grass pollen (nanograms of allergen) suppresses allergen-induced cutaneous late phase responses, in keeping with effects of conventional high dose subcutaneous and sublingual immunotherapy. This study evaluated the efficacy and safety of grass pollen intradermal immunotherapy for treatment of allergic rhinitis. |
Experimental Design | 93 adults adults with grass pollen allergic rhinitis received 7 pre-seasonal Intradermal allergen immunotherapy injections (containing 7 ng of Phl p 5 major allergen) or histamine control. The primary end point was daily combined symptom-medication scores during the 2013 pollen season. Skin biopsies were taken after the pollen season following an intradermal allergen challenge. Cutaneous late phase responses were measured 4 and either 7, 10 or 13 months post-treatment. |
Experimental Variables | Intradermal immunotherapy |
Controls | 8 histamine controls |
Platform | Illumina HumanHT-12 v4 |
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