Real‐world benefits of allergen immunotherapy for birch pollen‐associated allergic rhinitis and asthma

U Wahn, C Bachert, J Heinrich, H Richter, S Zielen - Allergy, 2019 - Wiley Online Library
U Wahn, C Bachert, J Heinrich, H Richter, S Zielen
Allergy, 2019Wiley Online Library
Background Real‐world evidence is sparse on the benefits of allergen immunotherapy [AIT;
subcutaneous/sublingual immunotherapy (SCIT/SLIT)], the only disease‐modifying
intervention for allergic rhinitis (AR) with long‐term efficacy. This real‐life study evaluated
the effect of six AIT s (native pollen SLIT/SCIT, four allergoid SCIT s) vs symptomatic
medication use, on AR symptoms and asthma symptoms/onset, in patients with birch pollen‐
associated AR and/or asthma. Methods In this retrospective cohort analysis of a German …
Background
Real‐world evidence is sparse on the benefits of allergen immunotherapy [AIT; subcutaneous/sublingual immunotherapy (SCIT/SLIT)], the only disease‐modifying intervention for allergic rhinitis (AR) with long‐term efficacy. This real‐life study evaluated the effect of six AITs (native pollen SLIT/SCIT, four allergoid SCITs) vs symptomatic medication use, on AR symptoms and asthma symptoms/onset, in patients with birch pollen‐associated AR and/or asthma.
Methods
In this retrospective cohort analysis of a German longitudinal prescription database, AIT patients received ≥2 successive seasonal treatment cycles; non‐AIT patients had ≥3 AR prescriptions in three seasons or previous month. Patients were matched for: index year, age, gender, main indication at index, number of seasonal cycles within treatment period, baseline AR/asthma treatment prescriptions. Multiple regression analysis compared prescription data in AIT and non‐AIT groups as proxy for clinical status/disease progression.
Results
Up to 6 years of follow‐up, significantly more AIT (65.4%) vs non‐AIT (47.4%) patients were AR medication‐free; odds ratio (OR) [95% confidence interval (CI)]: 0.51 [(0.48‐0.54); P < 0.001] (28.6% covariate‐adjusted reduction vs non‐AIT; P < 0.001), and significantly more AIT (49.1%) vs non‐AIT (35.1%) patients were asthma medication‐free [OR (95% CI): 0.59 (0.55‐0.65); P < 0.001] (32% reduction vs non‐AIT; P < 0.001), or reduced existing asthma medication use (32% covariate‐adjusted reduction vs non‐AIT; P < 0.001). During treatment, new‐onset asthma risk was significantly reduced in the AIT vs non‐AIT group (OR: 0.83; P = 0.001).
Conclusions
Birch pollen AIT demonstrated real‐world benefits up to 6 years post‐treatment cessation through significantly reduced AR and asthma medication intake, and significantly decreased risk of new‐onset asthma medication use on‐treatment.
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