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Ausgabe Januar 2005
Lebensmittelallergie gegen
Erdnüsse II: Hunde die gegen Erdnüsse, Milch und Weizen
allergisch sind können gegen diese Allergene geimpft werden.
Nach der Impfung haben sie drastisch weniger
Allergiesymptome. Die Wissenschaftler der Stanford
Universität vermuten, daß es in Zukunft möglich sein
wird, auch Menschen gegen spezifische Allergien zu
impfen.(2)

Eine englischsprachige zusammenfassende
Kurzversion dieser Studie (sog. MEDLINE Abstract) finden Sie
auf der Website
www.pubmed.org
wenn Sie dort in die Suchmaske den Titel dieser Studie
eingeben:
Stanford University press
release; Nov. 12, 2004, Allergy online
Vaccine Stops Food Allergy in Dogs
FRIDAY, Nov. 12 Dogs with allergies to peanuts, milk
and wheat experienced sharply fewer reactions after being
vaccinated for those specific food allergens, researchers in
California report.
Peanut-allergic dogs, after receiving the vaccine, were able
to eat many more of the legumes without developing an
allergic response. On average, they went from tolerating a
single peanut to eating more than 37. Similar reductions in
allergic responses were observed among milk- and
wheat-allergic dogs after receiving the vaccine.
"Although we clearly have to do studies in humans, this
study suggests [that] vaccine strategies can be developed to
treat food allergies successfully," said study author Dr.
Dale Umetsu, a professor of pediatrics at Stanford
University and chief of the allergy and immunology division
at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital in Palo Alto, Calif.
The study, said to be the first to reverse food allergies in
an animal other than a mouse, appears in the Nov. 12 online
issue of Allergy.
An estimated 11 million Americans suffer from food allergies,
for which there are no cures, according to the Food Allergy
& Anaphylaxis Network (FAAN), a Virginia-based advocacy
group. A food allergy occurs when the body's immune system
overreacts, treating a particular food as if it were a
foreign invader. The body reacts by releasing chemicals that
trigger a range of symptoms, including itching, swelling,
hives and difficulty breathing.
Some food-induced reactions can be life-threatening,
accounting for about 30,000 emergency-room visits and as
many as 200 deaths each year, FAAN reports. Eight foods in
particular -- milk, egg, peanut, tree nuts, fish, shellfish,
soy and wheat -- account for 90 percent of all food-allergic
reactions.
While there's a lot of research being done in the area of
food allergy, particularly peanut allergy, it may be five to
10 years before effective treatments on available, said Anne
Munoz-Furlong, FAAN's founder and CEO.
Umetsu's vaccine uses heat-killed Listeria, a food-borne
contaminant, mixed with peanuts, milk or wheat, to stimulate
a protective immune response.
While study results are based solely on animal testing, "the
fact that this looks very promising means that we can look
forward to it moving to human trials in the future,"
Munoz-Furlong said.
To test the vaccine, researchers used dogs that were both
prone to allergies and treated to have very severe food
allergies. Four of the dogs in the study had peanut allergy;
they also were allergic to cow's milk and ragweed. Ten weeks
after receiving a vaccine that combined heat-killed Listeria
and peanut, the presence of allergic skin bumps was
dramatically reduced. In addition, the dogs tolerated more
peanut in their diet. Three of the four dogs, in fact, could
eat a handful of peanuts -- about 57 of the legumes --
without developing symptoms.
Only their peanut allergy was treated, which shows that the
vaccine is antigen-specific. "In those dogs, their peanut
allergy got much better, but their milk allergy did not,"
Umetsu said.
Similarly, five dogs with milk, wheat, beef and ragweed
allergies were tested for symptoms and skin reactions. Three
were vaccinated for milk and wheat allergies; two served as
controls. The vaccinated dogs had a 60 percent reduction in
diarrhea and a 100 percent reduction in vomiting compared
with reactions prior to vaccination. Likewise, skin tests
showed marked reductions in allergic reactions.
"This study shows that by using a vaccination protocol, you
can, in fact, get a protective type of response -- and we've
showed this in an animal that is much closer to humans than,
say, mice, on the evolutionary scale," Umetsu said.
More animal studies are needed that demonstrate, more
specifically, the mechanism of this suppressive effect on
the immune system, he added. Plus, researchers need to show
what specific components of the heat-killed Listeria vaccine
make it so effective.
Until there's an effective vaccine for treating symptoms,
Munoz-Furlong urges food allergy sufferers to read food
labels carefully and carry epinephrine, an injectable drug
for treating severe allergic reactions.
SOURCES: Dale Umetsu, M.D., Ph.D., professor, pediatrics,
Stanford University, and chief, allergy and immunology
division, Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, Palo Alto,
Calif.; Anne Munoz-Furlong, founder and CEO, Food Allergy &
Anaphylaxis Network, Fairfax, Va.;
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