Dandan Fang, Xu Zhang, Jingyun Li, Luo Zhang, Yuan Zhang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Allergic rhinitis (AR) is global health concern with an increasing prevalence. Among them, pollen-induced AR (PIAR) exhibits more severe and intense symptoms, decreased quality of life, prominent local inflammation, and is thus more challenging to control. Due to the difficulties in disease control, in recent years, an increasing number of treatment methods, including pharmacotherapy, allergen-specific immunotherapy, and newly developed biologics, have focused on PIAR. It has been shown that the pollen exposure has a significant impact on the symptoms of PIAR and the efficacy of intervention. From this perspective, clinical trials for PIAR need to take full account of pollen exposure, especially when assessing efficacy.
Areas covered: This review summarized the effect of pollen exposure on PIAR, including immune responses, symptoms and clinic visits. Current definitions for the pollen season (PS) and the peak pollen season (PPS) are discussed. Based on the previous PIAR-related clinical studies and the available recommendations for clinical trial design, a detailed account of trial protocols which fully considered pollen exposure is provided.
Expert opinion: Pollen exposure has a significant impact on PIAR. With fully considering the pollen exposure in the clinical trial design for PIAR, future protocols for PIAR-related studies may be more objective and better harmonized and, therefore, comparable.
期刊介绍:
Expert Review of Clinical Immunology (ISSN 1744-666X) provides expert analysis and commentary regarding the performance of new therapeutic and diagnostic modalities in clinical immunology. Members of the International Editorial Advisory Panel of Expert Review of Clinical Immunology are the forefront of their area of expertise. This panel works with our dedicated editorial team to identify the most important and topical review themes and the corresponding expert(s) most appropriate to provide commentary and analysis. All articles are subject to rigorous peer-review, and the finished reviews provide an essential contribution to decision-making in clinical immunology.
Articles focus on the following key areas:
• Therapeutic overviews of specific immunologic disorders highlighting optimal therapy and prospects for new medicines
• Performance and benefits of newly approved therapeutic agents
• New diagnostic approaches
• Screening and patient stratification
• Pharmacoeconomic studies
• New therapeutic indications for existing therapies
• Adverse effects, occurrence and reduction
• Prospects for medicines in late-stage trials approaching regulatory approval
• Novel treatment strategies
• Epidemiological studies
• Commentary and comparison of treatment guidelines
Topics include infection and immunity, inflammation, host defense mechanisms, congenital and acquired immunodeficiencies, anaphylaxis and allergy, systemic immune diseases, organ-specific inflammatory diseases, transplantation immunology, endocrinology and diabetes, cancer immunology, neuroimmunology and hematological diseases.