World News Now: Affordable Medical Insurance >
   
      
Home | Login | Feeling Stressed? | FAQ's | Contact us    
Studies on Allergy
Eyelid protein is key to allergy
Protein offers allergy care hope
Why so many have peanut allergies
Hopes over food allergy vaccine
Allergy vaccine hopes get boost
Allergy surge to be investigated
How safe are the drugs we take?
Asthma and hay fever linked to irregular periods
Chemicals may damage male babies
Toxins Pass Disease To Next Generation
Register for News
Links

Allergy vaccine hopes get boost

Medical researchers have obtained promising results from a trial of a genetically-engineered allergy vaccine.

During the trial, conducted in Austria, Sweden and France, the vaccine significantly reduced peoples' allergic response to pollen.

The team says it is already developing further GM vaccines to combat other allergies.

The research is reported in the academic journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

It is estimated that around a quarter of the world's population is allergic to something. Some allergies, such as asthma, can be life-threatening.

They are caused by the body's immune system over-reacting to a substance which is in fact harmless.

Switch on, switch off

Vaccines against diseases like measles or polio are intended to make the immune system turn on. But an allergy vaccine needs to do the opposite.

In the words of lead researcher Rudolf Valenta from the Medical University of Vienna, it needs to turn the fires of the immune system down.

"What we find in fact is that when people are vaccinated, they have kind of a barrier of antibodies; and apparently these antibodies prevent the oil getting to the fire and heating up the allergic inflammation," he said.

Professor Valenta's team has genetically-engineered the pollen of birch trees so that in the bodies of allergy sufferers it produces antibodies which greatly reduce the immune response.

As an added bonus it also reduces the response to some other types of pollen as well. Treatments are already available for some allergies which use the same principle, immunising with small fragments of the substance in question.

But although these can work well, they can also produce major side-effects.

By using genetic-engineering, this research team has managed to produce the benefit without the side-effects.

They have already developed GM versions of other common allergy-producing substances, and aims to find out whether these can work as vaccines too - either to treat those who are already allergic, or to prevent allergies developing in the first place.

"In the future...we will soon see further applications of these modified allergens, also in patients," said Professor Valenta.


Source: BBC News

Site Map American Healthcare Foundation : HomePrivacy & Terms

An Educational Program of The American Healthcare Foundation
© 2004, 2005 The American Healthcare Foundation

Disclaimer: This site is provided for general information only, and is not a substitute for the medical advice of your own doctor or other health care professional. This site is not responsible or liable for any diagnosis made by a user based on the content of this website. This site is not liable for the contents of any external internet sites listed, nor does it endorse any commercial product or service mentioned or advised on any of such sites. Always consult your own doctor.


support