1 Jacobs, Robert L., Geoffrey W.Rake,Jr., et.al. Potentiated Anaphylaxis in Patients with Drug-induced Beta-adrenergic Blockade. J.Allergy & Clin. Immunol., 68(2): 125-127. August 1981.
2 Ishizaka,K.: Cellular Events in the IgE Antibody Response. Adv. in Immuno. 23:50-75, 1976.
3. Lockey, R.F., Bukantz, S.C., Allergen Immunotherapy. New York,NY: Marcel Dekker Inc., 1991.
4. Reid,M.J., Lockey,R.F., Turkeltaub,P.C., Platts-Mills,T.A.E., Survey of fatalities from skin testing and immunotherapy 1985-1989. Journal of Allergy Clin. Immunol. 92 (1): 6-15, July 1993.
5. Murray, A.B., Ferguson, A., Morrison, B., The frequency and severity of cat allergy vs dog allergy in atopic children. J. Allergy Clin. Immunolo: 72, 145-9, 1983.
6. Lockey, R.F., Bukantz, S.C., Allergen Immunotherapy. New York,NY: Marcel Dekker Inc., 1991.
ADDITIONAL INSTRUCTIONS DOSAGE FORM AND ROUTE OF ADMINISTRATION FOR USE OF ALLERGENIC EXTRACTS CONTAINING SHORT RAGWEED POLLEN
This is a supplement to Directions for Use and Suggested Dosage Schedule for Therapeutic Allergenic Extracts
INFORMATION RELATING TO ANTIGEN E
Antigen E Content in Concentrate: This product is compounded and diluted on a PNU or W/V basis. Extracts containing Short Ragweed Pollen also bear a labeled potency in terms of Antigen E content. The amount of Antigen E is expressed as units of Antigen E per mL of extract. Antigen E units are approximately equal to micrograms previously used to measure Antigen E concentration. Antigen E assay provides a measure of extract potency related to the E antigen in Short Ragweed, rather than only an expression of extract strength such as Protein Nitrogen Units (PNU) or Weight/Volume (W/V).
Example: Short Ragweed pollen extracted at 1:10 W/V usually assays within a range Of 70,000-100,000 PNU/mL and 100-400 AgE Units. (Analytical accuracy of the Antigen E assay is ±25%) Most treatment programs are W/V concentration of 1:100 to 1:20 or a PNU/mL concentrate of 20,000 to 40,000.
This would give a 70-100 AgE unit/mL concentration of Short Ragweed extract (Tall and Short Ragweed mix would be 1/2 this value).
New extraction lots of Short Ragweed will be labeled ac¬cording to W/V or PNU in addition to Antigen E content.
Antigen E Content in Mixtures: The Antigen E value applies only to the concentration of the Short Ragweed antigens contained in a concentrate. The Antigen E value does not express the total potency of the extract if Short Ragweed is mixed with another allergenic extract. Labeled Antigen content of extracts containing Short Ragweed at a concentration more dilute than a concentrate is determined by calculation. The formulae used for such calculations is given by:
V1 C1 = V2 C2
V1 = Volume of extract you wish to prepare
V2 = Volume of extract you need for dilution
C1 = Concentration (W/V, PNU/mL, units Antigen E/mL) you wish to prepare
C2 = Concentration of extract to be used
HOW SUPPLIED
Therapeutic allergens are available in l0mL and 50mL sterile multiple dose vials as individual allergens, stock mixture or mixture prescribed by the physician. Therapeutic allergens are standardized according to weight/volume.
Antigen E Short Ragweed and Tall and Short Ragweed mixture allergenic extracts are available in l0mL and 50mL dose vials at 1:10 and 40,000 PNU/mL aqueous or 1:20 and 20,000 PNU/mL with 50% glycerin.
SHORT RAGWEED AND MIXED RAGWEED
(Mixed Ragweed/equal parts ofShort and Tall)
WARNING: This product is intended for use by or under the guidelines of physicians experienced and trained in the use allergenic extracts for hyposensitization and who are experienced in the emergency treatment of anaphylaxis.
PRECAUTIONS
The practitioner should have available the following: Epinephrine, tourniquet, parenteral fluids, bronchodilators, cardioactive drugs, as well as adequate oxygenation required for endotracheal intubation, emergency cricothyrotomy, or transtracheal catheterization if patient cannot be intubated.
In the event of systemic reactions characterized by one or more of the following: sneezing, mild to severe generalized urticaria, itching other than at the injection site, extensive or generalized edema, wheezing, asthma, dyspnea, cyanosis, tachycardia, lacrimation, marked perspiration, cough, hypotension, syncope, shock and upper airway obstruction, all of which may result in death, the following steps should taken: application of a tourniquet above the injection site and administration of 0.2 mL to 1.0 mL of Epinephrine Injection 1:1000 are recommended. Maximal recommended dose children under 2 years of age is 0.3 mL. Maximal recommended dose for children between 2 and 12 years of age is 0.5 mL. Following customary technique, the tourniquet is gradually released. The tourniquet should not be left in place without loosening for 90 seconds every 15 minutes. Volume expanders and vasopressor agents may be required to reverse hypotension. Inhaled bronchodialators and parenteral aminophylline may be required to reverse bronospasm.
Pregnancy Category C (Short Ragweed) - Animal reproduction studies have not been conducted with Short Ragweed. It is also not known whether Short Ragweed can cause fetal harm when administered to a pregnant woman or can affect reproduction capacity. Short Ragweed should be given to a pregnant woman only if clearly needed.
Pediatricis use: There is conflicting evidence as to the effectiveness of AgE extracts in children. Some studies have shown a decrease in clinical symptomatology.
GENERAL INFORMATION
1. Extract should be inspected visually for particulate matter and discoloration prior to administration whenever solution and product container permit.
2. In addition to the active ingredients - Short Ragweed pollen extract - this product contains 0.4% phenol as a preservative and as inactive ingredients - 0.5% NaCl and 0.275% NaHCO3.
3. All extracts are aseptically filled.
4. This product should be stored upon arrival at 2° C to 8° C as determined by stability data furnished by the FDA showing rapid drop in potency at temperatures above refrigerated temperatures for non-glycerinated products. 50% glycerin extracts maintain AgE stability much longer.
CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Cumulative AgE dosage of less than 0.1 unit is not immunizing for most patients. This should not be interpreted as meaning that 0.1 unit is the maximum tolerated dosage. It has been shown that moderately sensitive patients may tolerate a dosage of ten to fifty times greater. For extremely sensitive patients who do not respond to treatment, the physician might consider immunotherapy with an alternative to the conventional aqueous allergenic extract.
INDICATIONS AND USAGE
This product is intended for use in the amelioration of symptoms associated with Short Ragweed allergy. If this is adjunctive therapy, beware of any regimen which might interfere with existing medications. Studies show that sufficient antigen dosage immunotherapy gives moderate or significant relief from Ragweed hayfever in adults.
Justification for use of this therapy can be derived from patient questionaires, daily diaries, respiratory function tests of airflow and lung volume and by immunological tests such as: leukocyte histamine release, measurement of allergenic specific IgE. lgG and IgA antibodies in serum and secretions, allergen provocation tests to skin, nose and lung.
CONTRAINDICATIONS
This product should not be used if the patient has a considerable identifiable risk such as asthma, cardiovascular disease, emphysema, diabetes or pregnancy, unless a specific diagnosis of type 1 allergy is made based on skin testing and the benefits of treatment are felt to outweigh the risks of an adverse reaction during testing or treatment.
ADVERSE REACTIONS
Defined as undesirable effects that are reasonably associated with product use, such as the following effects on various organ systems: erythema and pruritis of the skin, asthma effecting the lungs, tachycardia and angioedema of the heart and rhinitis of the nasal membranes.
Those reactions are mainly due to the interaction of allergen (antigen) with IgE specific antibodies, but other causes have not been excluded. For example, endotoxins, other types of reactions resuiting from prolonged immunotherapy, such as immune complex disease have been suggested as theoretical possibilities but not documented.
DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION
General Precautions: Sterile solutions, vials, syringes, etc. should be used and aseptic precautions observed in making dilutions. Dilution preparations should be tested for sterility. The usual precautions to be observed in administering extracts are necessary.
A sterile tuberculin syringe graduated in 0.1 mL units to measure each dose from the prescribed dilution should be used.
A treatment schedule is related directly to patient's sensitivity as determined first by skin testing and continuously by response to therapeutic doses. The potency of the intial injections should be adjusted to the patient's sensitivity. 1/10 of the lowest concentration producing positive ID skin test is usually safe.
Injections are administered subcutaneously, care to avoid injecting into blood vessels should be observed (Withdraw plunger gently. If blood appears, use a new injection site). A separate heat sterilized or sterile disposable syringe and needle should be used for each individual patient to prevent the transmission of homologous serum hepatitis and other infectious agents from one person to another.
Patient should always be observed for at least 30 minutes after any injection. If adverse reactions appear, the next therapeutic injection of extract should be reduced to the dose which does not elicit a reaction and subsequent doses increased more slowly.
| A. 0.01 AgE/mL
B. (0.005 AgE/mL) | 0.1 AgE/mL
(0.05 AgE/mL) | 1.0 AgE/mL
(0.5 AgE/mL) | 10 AgE/mL
(5 AgE/mL) | 100 AgE/mL
(50 AgE/mL) |
| Dose No. | Dose mL | Dose No. | Dose mL | Dose No. | Dose mL | Dose No. | Dose mL | Dose No. | Dose mL |
| 1 | .03 | 7 | .03 | 13 | .03 | 19 | .03 | 25 | .03 |
| 2 | .05 | 8 | .05 | 14 | .05 | 20 | .05 | 26 | .05 |
| 3 | .08 | 9 | .08 | 15 | .08 | 21 | .08 | 27 | .08 |
| 4 | .12 | 10 | .12 | 16 | .12 | 22 | .12 | 28 | .12 |
| 5 | .20 | 11 | .20 | 17 | .20 | 23 | .20 | 29 | .20 |
| 6 | .30 | 12 | .30 | 18 | .30 | 24 | .30 | 30 | .30 |
Frequently dilutions of 1:100,000 W/V are prepared as the initial dilution or, in terms of Antigen E concentration, approximately 0.01 to 0.05 AgE units. For individuals which are hypersensitive, a more dilute extract is recommended, e.g. 1:1,000,000 W/V or 0.001 to 0.005 Antigen E/mL. A dose of 0.03 to 0.05 mL of this initial concentration is used initially and gradually increased in units of 0.03 mL (see above schedule) until a tolerance dose is reached or symptoms are controlled. Should a marked local reaction occur, the dosage should be lowered to a non-reactive dose before increasing once again.
Allergenic extracts become less potent with age. Should it therefore become necessary to treat a patient with a vial bearing a later expiration date, the initial dose of the extract should be lowered to a safe, non-reacting level.
Extremely sensitive patients may react to 0.01 units AgE or less on intradermal skin testing. For these patients a safe dose may be between 0.0004 and 0.0008 units of AgE requiring 100 fold dilution from dose one listed in the recommended table.
In transferring patients from unstandardized to standardized product, the physician should establish the potency relationship, perhaps by comparative skin testing at equal concentration, prior to injecting the first standardized dose.
1.Lowell. F.C., et. al., "Journal of Allergy" 34, 165 (1963)
2.Ibid. "New Eng. Journal of Medicine" 273, 675 (1965)
3.Lichtenstein, L.M. et. al., "American Journal of Medicine" 44, 514 (1968)
4.Lichtenstein, L.M. et. al., "Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology" 61, 370 (1978)
5.Van Metre, T.E. and Lichtenstein, L.M. et. al., "Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology" 60, 181 (1982)
6.Lessof and Lippincott, "Immunologic Apsects of Allergy" 81, 300 (1981)