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Increasing time interval and decreasing allergen dose interval improves ex vivo desensitization of human blood basophils

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

BACKGROUND: Desensitization is a method for inducing temporary tolerance to allergen. The mechanism underlying desensitization is yet to be established. METHODS: Basophil granulocytes in whole blood from grass pollen allergic subjects were desensitized ex vivo by sequential addition of increasing allergen concentrations. At each step basophil activation (CD193 + CD63+ ) was monitored with and without (background activation) allergen challenge at optimal concentration. The sequential desensitization protocol was compared to two single-dose desensitization protocols with threshold and subthreshold allergen concentrations. Incubation intervals and allergen concentrations were varied in order to optimise the protocol. RESULTS: Sequential desensitization effectively reduced basophil response. The single-dose subthreshold protocol and single-dose threshold protocol did not reduce basophil activation with optimal allergen challenge from a mean 57.1 (95% CI: 32.7 - 81.5) to 50.4% (95% CI: 16.3 - 84.4; n = 5; P = 0.43) and 45.0% (95% CI: 23.1 - 66.9; P = 0.14) respectively, while the sequential desensitization protocol reduced activation to a mean 37.2% (95% CI: 16.3 - 58.1; P = 0.018). Reducing incubation time from 10 to 5 minutes increased mean background activation from 22.4 (95% CI: 11.7 - 33.1) to 30.0% (95% CI: 19.7 - 40.3; n = 5; P = 0.026). Increasing time intervals from 10 to 20 minutes reduced background activation from 30.9 (95% CI: 22.8 - 39.0) to 21.9% (95% CI: 16.0 - 27.7; n = 5; P = 0.020). Increasing allergen concentration intervals from 2-fold to 5- and 10-fold did not have significant effect on basophil activation. CONCLUSIONS: Sequential desensitization ex vivo effectively attenuates the basophil response to allergen. Increasing the time spent at each step improves desensitization. This protocol could be valuable for investigation the mechanism of desensitization. © 2016 International Clinical Cytometry Society.
Journal: CYTOMETRY PART B-CLINICAL CYTOMETRY
ISSN: 1552-4949
Issue: 5
Volume: 92
Pages: 340 - 347
Publication year:2017
BOF-keylabel:yes
IOF-keylabel:yes
BOF-publication weight:1
CSS-citation score:1
Authors:International
Authors from:Higher Education