Basics of Immunotherapy - Immune Tune-Up
- Definition: Therapeutic administration of allergens to induce immune tolerance in allergic individuals, modifying the natural course of allergic disease.
- Goal: Achieve long-term symptom remission, prevent new sensitizations, and improve quality of life.
- Mechanism of Action:
- Shifts immune response from Th2 (pro-allergic) to Th1 (protective).
- Induces regulatory T cells (Tregs) & regulatory B cells (Bregs).
- ↑ Production of blocking antibodies (IgG4).
- ↓ Allergen-specific IgE levels over time.
- ↓ Mast cell, basophil, and eosinophil reactivity.
- Core Principle: Gradual, controlled exposure to increasing doses of specific allergens.
⭐ Immunotherapy is the only disease-modifying treatment for allergic diseases.

Allergen Immunotherapy (AIT) - Allergy Avengers Assemble
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Goal: Induce allergen-specific tolerance, modify disease course.
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Mechanism: ↑Treg, IL-10, IgG4 (blocking Ab); ↓IgE, mast cell reactivity; Th2→Th1 shift.
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Indications:
- Allergic rhinitis/conjunctivitis (mod-severe, persistent).
- Allergic asthma (mild-mod, controlled, allergen confirmed).
- Venom hypersensitivity (VIT highly effective).
- Atopic dermatitis (select cases with aeroallergens).
- Criteria: IgE-mediated allergy, allergen unavoidable, meds/avoidance insufficient.
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Contraindications:
- Absolute: Uncontrolled asthma (FEV1 < 70%), active systemic autoimmune disease, malignancy.
- Relative: Significant CVD, β-blockers/ACE-i (esp. SCIT), poor adherence, pregnancy (initiation).
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SCIT vs. SLIT:
⭐ Sublingual Immunotherapy (SLIT) generally has a better safety profile than Subcutaneous Immunotherapy (SCIT), especially regarding systemic reactions.
- Duration: Typically 3-5 years for sustained benefit post-discontinuation.
- 📌 AIT: Alleviates Immune Troubles!
AIT Practicalities - Dose, Duration, Dangers
- Dosing & Standardization:
- Allergen extracts standardized: Bioequivalent Allergy Units (BAU), Allergy Units (AU).
- Phases: Build-up (weekly/bi-weekly, gradually ↑dose) & Maintenance (monthly, constant highest tolerated dose).
- Dose adjustments for missed doses, local/systemic reactions, or new allergen vials.
- Duration for Tolerance:
⭐ The standard duration for allergen immunotherapy (SCIT/SLIT) to achieve long-term tolerance is typically 3-5 years.
- Decision to stop based on sustained clinical benefit and patient/physician assessment.
- Dangers & Management:
- Local Reactions: Common (erythema, pruritus, swelling at injection site). Manage with cold compresses, topical corticosteroids, oral antihistamines.
- Systemic Reactions (SRs): Range from mild (urticaria, rhinitis) to severe anaphylaxis.
- Risk factors: Uncontrolled asthma, high allergen dose, dosing errors, concurrent illness.
- 📌 Anaphylaxis: Epinephrine (0.01 mg/kg of 1:1000 solution IM, max 0.3-0.5 mg per dose), O2, IV fluids, antihistamines, corticosteroids. Observe for 4-6 hours.
- Contraindications (Absolute): Severe uncontrolled asthma, active autoimmune disease. (Relative): Beta-blocker/ACE inhibitor use, significant cardiovascular disease.

Special ITx - Venom Victors & Food Frontiers
- Venom Immunotherapy (VIT):
- Highly effective for Hymenoptera venom allergy (bees, wasps, ants).
- Significantly ↓ anaphylaxis risk from future stings.
- Protocol: Initial build-up, then maintenance every 4-8 weeks for 3-5 years.
- Indications: Systemic reaction to sting + positive venom IgE or skin test.
⭐ Venom immunotherapy (VIT) is nearly 95-98% effective in preventing anaphylaxis from future stings in sensitized individuals.
- Food Immunotherapy (FIT):
- Oral (OIT): Aims to desensitize to specific foods (e.g., peanut, milk, egg). Involves ingesting gradually increasing allergen doses. Requires strict medical supervision.
- Sublingual (SLIT): Alternative to OIT for food allergy; potentially fewer systemic reactions but less established for food allergens compared to aeroallergens or VIT for venom.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Allergen Immunotherapy (AIT) aims to induce allergen-specific immune tolerance.
- Key indications: severe allergic rhinitis, allergic asthma, and insect venom hypersensitivity.
- Mechanism: Shifts from Th2 to Th1 response, increases Treg cells and IgG4 blocking antibodies.
- Routes: Subcutaneous (SCIT) and Sublingual (SLIT) are primary methods.
- Duration: Typically 3-5 years for sustained, disease-modifying effects.
- SCIT carries a risk of anaphylaxis; requires post-injection observation.
- AIT can lead to long-term remission of allergic symptoms after completion of therapy.
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