Efficacy of house dust mite sublingual immunotherapy tablet in North American adolescents and adults in a randomized, placebo-controlled trial - 18/04/17
Abstract |
Background |
The house dust mite (HDM) sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) tablet (MK-8237; Merck & Co, Kenilworth, NJ/ALK-Abelló, Hørsholm, Denmark) has demonstrated beneficial effects on allergic rhinoconjunctivitis and asthma outcomes in European trials.
Objective |
This is the first trial to assess the efficacy/safety of HDM SLIT-tablets in North American subjects with HDM-induced allergic rhinitis with or without conjunctivitis (AR/C).
Methods |
In this double-blind, multicenter trial (NCT01700192) 1482 subjects (aged ≥12 years) with HDM-induced AR/C with or without asthma were randomized to a daily SQ HDM SLIT-tablet (12 SQ-HDM dose) or placebo for up to approximately 52 weeks. A rhinitis daily symptom score (DSS; 4 nasal symptoms, maximum score = 12) of 6 or greater, or 5 or greater with 1 symptom being severe, on 5 of 7 consecutive days before randomization was required. The primary end point was the average total combined rhinitis score, which was defined as the rhinitis DSS plus rhinitis daily medication score (DMS), during the last 8 treatment weeks.
Results |
Treatment with 12 SQ-HDM improved the total combined rhinitis score by 17% (95% CI, 10% to 25%) versus placebo. Improvements versus placebo in the secondary end points of average rhinitis DSS, rhinitis DMS, total combined rhinoconjunctivitis score, and visual analog scale–assessed AR/C symptoms were 16%, 18%, 17%, and 16%, respectively. All nominal P values were less than .001 versus placebo, except rhinitis DMS (P = 0.15). No treatment-related adverse events meeting the International Council on Harmonization definition of a serious adverse event were reported; 1 nonserious treatment-related systemic allergic reaction occurred (assessed as moderate intensity) at first administration under medical supervision and was treated with epinephrine.
Conclusions |
In the first North American trial of use of a SLIT-tablet for HDM allergy, 12 SQ-HDM was well tolerated and improved HDM-induced rhinitis symptoms in adults and adolescents.
El texto completo de este artículo está disponible en PDF.Key words : Allergen immunotherapy, allergic rhinoconjunctivitis, house dust mite, sublingual immunotherapy tablet, North America, adolescents
Abbreviations used : AE, AIT, AR/C, DBPC, DMS, DSS, FAS, HDM, ICS, RQLQ(S)12+, SLIT, TCRS, TCS, VAS
Esquema
Supported by Merck & Co, Kenilworth, NJ. |
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Disclosure of potential conflict of interest: H. Nolte is employed by Merck. D. I. Bernstein has received consultancy fees from Merck, Circassia, Teva, Proctor Gamble, Sanofi Aventis, and Stallergenes Greer; grants from Merck, Circassia, Stallergenes Greer, TEVA, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Amgen, Pearl, Genentech, Allergy Therapy, Boehringer Ingelheim, and AstraZeneca; and lecture fees from Merck and AstraZeneca. H. S. Nelson has received consulting fees/honorarium from Merck and Circassia and has grants/grants pending from Circassia. J. Kleine-Tebbe is a paid board member of the Alk-Abelló, Novartis, Leti, and Bencare Advisory Boards; acts as a consultant for Merck and Circassia; has grants/grant pending from Circassia; and receives payment for lectures from Allergopharma, ALK-Abelló, Bencard, HAL Allergy, LETI, Lofarma, Novartis, and Stallergenes. G. L. Sussman is a consultant for Novartis, Merck, CSL, Sanofi, and Tribute pharmaceutical and receives support from Novartis and Merck. D. Seitzberg and D. Rehm are employed by ALK-Abelló. A. Kaur, Z. Li, and S. Lu are employed by Merck & Co. |
Vol 138 - N° 6
P. 1631-1638 - décembre 2016 Regresar al númeroBienvenido a EM-consulte, la referencia de los profesionales de la salud.
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