Mechanisms of allergen immunotherapy supporting its disease-modifying effect.
Roxana Silvia BumbaceaRama BoustaniCarmen PanaitescuLaura HaidarMaria-Roxana BuzanDragos BumbăceaAlexandru LaculiceanuCatalina CojanuDaniela SpanuIoana AgachePublished in: Immunotherapy (2022)
Allergen immunotherapy (AIT) is considered the only disease-modifying treatment available at present for allergic disorders. Its main benefits include improvement of symptoms, decreased need for pharmacotherapy, prevention of new sensitizations and sustained effect after AIT completion. The key pillars of AIT-induced tolerance include a shift from Th2 to Th1 response, an increase of regulatory T and B cells, pro-inflammatory effector cell downregulation and IgE suppression, in addition to IgG4, IgA and IgD induction. AIT may also induce trained immunity, characterized by a durable decrease in group 2 of innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) and increased ILC1 and ILC3s. Understanding the immune mechanisms of AIT is essential for validating biomarkers for the prediction of AIT response and for achieving AIT success.