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Continuous and Daily Oral Immunotherapy for Peanut Allergy: Results from a 2-Year Open-Label Follow-On Study

Authors :
Brian P. Vickery
Andrea Vereda
Caroline Nilsson
George du Toit
Wayne G. Shreffler
A. Wesley Burks
Stacie M. Jones
Montserrat Fernández-Rivas
Katharina Blümchen
Jonathan O’B. Hourihane
Kirsten Beyer
Aikaterini Anagnostou
Amal H. Assa’ad
Moshe Ben-Shoshan
J. Andrew Bird
Tara F. Carr
Warner W. Carr
Thomas B. Casale
Hey Jin Chong
Christina E. Ciaccio
Morna J. Dorsey
Stanley M. Fineman
Stephen B. Fritz
Alexander N. Greiner
Leon S. Greos
Frank C. Hampel
Maria Dolores Ibáñez
David K. Jeong
Douglas T. Johnston
Rita Kachru
Edwin H. Kim
Bruce J. Lanser
Stephanie A. Leonard
Mary C. Maier
Lyndon E. Mansfield
Antonella Muraro
Jason A. Ohayon
Joanna N.G. Oude Elberink
Daniel H. Petroni
Jacqueline A. Pongracic
Jay M. Portnoy
Rima Rachid
Ned T. Rupp
Georgiana M. Sanders
Hemant P. Sharma
Vibha Sharma
Ellen R. Sher
Lawrence Sher
Sayantani B. Sindher
Dareen Siri
Jonathan M. Spergel
Aline B. Sprikkelman
Gordon L. Sussman
Marina Tsoumani
Pooja Varshney
Girish Vitalpur
Julie Wang
William H. Yang
José Manuel Zubeldia
Alex Smith
Robert Ryan
Daniel C. Adelman
Source :
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice. 9:1879-1889.e13
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Background The randomized, controlled PALISADE trial demonstrated the benefit of daily oral immunotherapy with Peanut (Arachis Hypogaea) allergen powder-dnfp (PTAH, formerly AR101) in peanut-allergic children and adolescents. Objective ARC004, the open-label follow-on study to PALISADE, used 5 dosing cohorts to explore PTAH treatment beyond 1 year and alternative dosing regimens in peanut-allergic individuals. Methods Active arm (PTAH-continuing) PALISADE participants who tolerated 300-mg peanut protein at the exit double-blind placebo-controlled food challenge and placebo arm (PTAH-naive) participants could enter ARC004. PTAH-continuing participants were assigned to receive daily (cohorts 1 and 3A) or non–daily (cohorts 2, 3B, and 3C) dosing regimens; PTAH-naive participants were built up to 300 mg/d PTAH, followed by maintenance dosing. At study completion, participants underwent an exit double-blind placebo-controlled food challenge with doses up to 2000 mg peanut protein. Data were assessed using descriptive statistics. Results Overall, 358 (87.5%) eligible participants (4-17 years) entered ARC004 (PTAH-continuing, n = 256; PTAH-naive, n = 102). Among PTAH-continuing participants, exposure-adjusted adverse event rates were 12.94 to 17.54/participant-year and 25.95 to 42.49/participant-year in daily and non–daily dosing cohorts, respectively; most participants (83%) experienced mild or moderate adverse events. Daily dosing cohorts appeared to have higher desensitization rates than non–daily dosing cohorts. Of all PTAH-continuing cohorts, cohort 3A had the longest daily dosing duration and the highest desensitization rates. Changes in immune markers with PTAH continuation demonstrated ongoing immunomodulation. Outcomes in PTAH-naive participants mirrored those of the PALISADE active arm. Conclusions Continued daily PTAH treatment beyond 1 year showed sustained safety and efficacy. Ongoing immunomodulation was observed during the second year of treatment.

Details

ISSN :
22132198
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....53ffe2574fa25f04356ca940f631f406
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaip.2020.12.029