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CAT ALLERGY VACCINE By Sean
Henahan, Access Excellence
BALTIMORE, Md. (1/2/97)
A new type of experimental vaccine shows promise in protecting
susceptible individuals from the perennial discomfort of cat
allergy, suggests a study from Johns Hopkins University.
Image:
3-D structure of T-cell receptor
The new treatment is called an epitope vaccine. Molecular
biologists cloned the cat dander allergen and identified
specific T-cell epitopes associated with the human immune
response. These developments coincide with increased
understanding of the role of T-cells in the allergic response.
"Traditional allergy shots inject water and extracts from
allergens like cat dander or pollen," says Phil Norman, M.D.,
professor of medicine. "This vaccine only injects very specific
parts of cat allergens selected for their ability to favorably
stimulate the immune system."
The research team gave 95 cat-allergic patients four injections
of various levels of the vaccine or a placebo. Afterward, they
were exposed to a room containing cats.
"Based on the patients' evaluation of their symptoms, the
vaccine significantly reducing sneezing, itching, watery eyes
and inflammation after a month of treatment," Norman says.
Traditional "allergy shots" involve the use of months worth of
empirical hyposensitization with injected unstandardized
allergenic extracts. The new epitope vaccines are injected
subcutaneously in minute doses, and only once or twice. The
early indications are that a single injection can provide
prolonged protection against a specific allergen. The hope is
that one or two injections would provide year round protection.
The traditional treatment also carries a risk of a serious
allergic reaction. "In contrast, patients receiving the vaccine
occasionally have mild symptoms on the injection day, but they
require only simple treatment," Norman notes.
Vaccines are based on the idea that the proteins in allergens
contain parts known as epitopes that stimulate the immune
system. Separated from the rest of the protein, these epitopes
interact with immune cells in a positive manner, causing a
series of reactions that makes future allergic attacks less
likely. But because the epitopes are given as a part of the
whole protein in traditional allergy shots, the shots take a
long time to work and sometimes trigger allergic reactions.
"If we're correct, this could make vaccines a superior approach
for controlling many allergies," Norman says.
This epitope vaccine approach represents a new direction in
allergy therapy. If successful, it will allow custom tailored
anti-allergy treatments for a variety of common allergens,
possibly with a single subcutaneous injection. If the vaccines
work as the developers hope, the anticipated result would be
prolonged T-cell down regulation, resulting in suppression of
late phase allergic inflammation and IgE antibody synthesis.
The idea of using allergen extracts to treat allergies was
first reported in 1911. It was originally thought that allergen
extracts worked by raising blocking antibodies. In the 1970's
this idea gave way to the concept that immunotherapy with
allergen extracts worked by increasing suppressor T-cells which
controlled IgE antibody production. The past decade has seen an
explosion in the field of T-cell biology, which has taught much
about the T-cell receptor and its interactions with antigen
presenting cells. This led to the idea of creating T-cell
epitopes to block IgE receptors, in turn blocking the allergic
cascade.
Each allergen source (e.g. cats, ragweed) can have as many
as 20 significant allergens, each with several T-cell epitopes.
Researchers were initially skeptical that treatment with a
restricted number of allergens or epitopes would be effective,
particularly if the therapies involved recombinant allergens or
synthetic peptides. However, several lines of evidence now
suggest that one (in the case of cat allergy) or two (dust mite
allergy) peptides are the dominant proteins for IgE antibody
production.
Further studies also are planned to clarify how long the
vaccine's effects last and how often follow-up injections are
needed. If all goes well, Norman says, ALLERVAX CAT may be
available in allergy clinics in several years. Early trials are
also currently underway with a related ragweed allergy vaccine.
The study appeared in the December, 1996 issue of the
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.
Related Information on the
Internet
National Institute for
Allergic and Infectious Diseases
Immunology Basics
AE: T-Cell
3-D Structure Revealed
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