View clinical trials related to Allergic Rhinitis.
Filter by:The safety and efficacy of specific sublingual immunotherapy for house dust mite allergens in patients over 60 years of age with allergic rhinitis and a confirmed allergy to house dust mites were the focus of the stu First, 111 patients, ages 60-75 years, with allergic rhinitis and with a confirmed allergy to D. pteronyssinus and D. farinae by the use of skin prick tests, serum-specific IgE and nasal provocation tests were included. Patients were individually randomised to groups: active or placebo using a double-blind method. A total of 51 subjects in the sublingual allergen-specific immunotherapy (SLIT) group (Staloral 300R, Stallergens, France) and 57 in the placebo group were monitored for three years. The patients had to record on a diary card whenever they used anti-allergic medications.
Primary aim is to evaluate the efficacy of specific immunotherapy with Pangramin SLIT HDM-mix compared to placebo in the treatment of House Dust Mite (HDM) induced rhinitis with or without asthma. Sublingual immunotherapy has been used during several years and has been shown to provide benefits compare to traditional subcutaneous treatment. This study will investigate if improvements in rhinitis symptoms and less use of symptomatic medication can be obtained as a consequence of being treated under specific immunotherapy. This study aim also to contribute to the documentation of tolerability and safety profile of Pangramin HDM Mix.
Safety study of Depigoid vaccine Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus or 50% Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus / 50% Dermatophagoides farinae (500 DPP/ml), to treat allergic rhinitis or rhinoconjunctivitis with or without asthma. Primary variable: number of subjects [%] who experienced at least one immediate or delayed systemic reaction of EAACI grade 2 or higher during the 4-month treatment period.
Objectives To assess the efficacy and safety of WF10 infusions in the treatment of subjects with persistent allergic rhinitis. Study Design Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, single-centre trial. Subjects 50 subjects (25 per treatment group) with history of persistent allergic rhinitis for at least 2 years prior to enrolment and a positive allergen skin test. Subjects will be required to have a minimum mean score ≥6 for the baseline Total Nasal Symptom Score (TNSS) (mean score of morning and evening reflective TNSS assessments for the 3 days prior to randomization and treatment. Treatments At the first treatment visit (T1), subjects that comply with the inclusion and exclusion criteria will be randomized into one of two treatment groups: WF10, or placebo. Each individual treatment dose of study drug solution is 0.5 mL/kg body weight, diluted into 500 mL saline solution. Treatment will be administered once daily for 5 consecutive days (Visits T1-T5) via intravenous infusion.
This Study is to comparison of Efficacy and Consistency of Action of Levocetirizine 5 mg once daily with Fexofenadine 60 mg twice daily in the histamine induced wheal, flare and itch Response.
There is a lack of prospective scientific data on the regular use of moisturizers in patients at risk of developing atopic dermatitis. Although generally accepted and widely used for secondary prevention, emollients have not been studied as a primary prevention strategy. Strategies previously studied for the prevention of atopic dermatitis include maternal and child's dietary manipulations, allergens avoidance, delay of food introduction, exclusive breastfeeding and probiotic supplementation. Despite years of research, none of those strategies yielded to strong evidence of a protective effect. There is therefore a need to explore novel strategies. There is a need to compare the cumulative incidence rate of atopic dermatitis in newborns using a standard bathing and moisturizing routine with a good moisturizer to a non interventional group. This 2-year study will recruit approximately four hundred and sixty (460) pregnant women with a first degree relative of the child to be born who currently has (or previously had) a diagnosis of atopic dermatitis in order to study approximately 200 eligible newborns in each of the two study groups at the beginning of the study. Pregnant women will be randomized (1:1) to either daily use of the moisturizer Lipikar Balm AP (applied to their infant) starting from birth (Group 1) immediately after bathing or to no intervention (Group 2).
This is a study to learn more about the common cold from studying the nasal secretions produced during a cold or episode of allergic rhinitis.
This study will provide the clinicians guidance on the safest combination of inhaled and nasal corticosteroids for children with mild asthma and allergic rhinitis respectively; however, one safety concern is that these products are independently known to have dose-related effects on short term and intermediate term growth. Knemometry is a non invasive technique for measuring short-term lower leg growth in children and is currently the method of choice in growth studies of short duration. Subjects will be seen on a weekly basis for 18 weeks and at each visit, lower leg length will be measured using knemometry.
Phase 1 study to evaluate the safety of MEDI4212.
The purpose of this study is to compare the systemic levels of beclomethasone 17 monopropionate (17 BMP - the active metabolite of BDP) after intranasal administration of BDP HFA with the systemic levels of 17 BMP after administration of orally inhaled BDP HFA in healthy volunteers.