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Immunotherapy Can Help

Immunotherapy Can Help

Immunotherapy treatment (allergy shots) is based on the concept that the immune system can be desensitized to specific allergens that trigger allergy symptoms.

While common allergy medications often control symptoms; if you stop taking the medication(s), your allergy symptoms return shortly afterward. Allergy shots can potentially lead to lasting remission of allergy symptoms, and it may play a preventive role in terms of development of asthma and new allergies.

The Process
Treatment involves injecting the allergen(s), causing the allergy symptoms. These allergens are identified by a combination of a medical evaluation performed by a trained allergist / immunologist and allergy skin or allergy blood tests.

The treatment begins with a build-up phase. Injections containing increasing amounts of the allergens are given 1 to 2 times a week until the target dose is reached. This target dose varies from person to person. The target dose may be reached in 3 to 6 months with a conventional schedule (one dose increase per visit) but may be achieved in shorter period of time with less visits with accelerated schedules such as cluster that administers 2-3 dose increases per visit.

The maintenance phase begins when the target dose is reached. Once the maintenance dose is reached, the time between the allergy injections can be increased and generally range from every 2 to every 4 weeks. Maintenance immunotherapy treatment is generally continued for 3 to 5 years.

Some people have lasting remission of their allergy symptoms but others may relapse after discontinuing immunotherapy, so the duration of allergen immunotherapy varies from person to person.

Risks involved with the immunotherapy approach are rare, but may include serious life threatening anaphylaxis. For that reason, immunotherapy should only be given under the supervision of a physician or qualified physician extender (nurse practitioner or physician assistant) in a facility equipped with proper staff and equipment to identify and treat adverse reactions to allergy injections.

The decision to begin immunotherapy will be based on several factors:
• Length of allergy season and severity of symptoms
• How well medications and avoiding allergens control allergy symptoms
• Desire to avoid long-term medication use
• Time. Immunotherapy will require a significant time commitment during the build-up phase, and a less frequent commitment during the maintenance phase
• Costs may vary depending on region and insurance coverage. Yet, allergy shots can be a cost-effective approach to managing allergy symptoms.

Another form of allergy immunotherapy therapy was recently approved in the United States called sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) allergy tablets. Rather than shots, allergy tablets involve administering the allergens under the tongue generally on a daily basis.

References: American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology. (2015). Immunotherapy can provide lasting relief. Retrieved from: http://www.aaaai.org/conditions-and-treatments/library/allergy-library/immunotherapy-can-provide-lasting-relief.aspx