Milgrom Henry
National Jewish Medical and Research Center, Denver, Colo, USA.
Adv Pediatr. 2002;49:273-97.
Positive skin tests or elevated levels of specific immunoglobulin E (IgE) in the serum define IgE sensitization or "atopy." The term "allergy" refers to the clinical expression of atopic IgE-mediated disease. Genetic predisposition and decreased infections in early childhood, together with exposure and sensitization to environmental allergens, fix the basis for the elevation of IgE in infancy. Elevated IgE shortly after birth is associated with later onset of allergic disorders. IgE participates both in the immediate hypersensitivity response and in the induction of chronic allergic inflammation. The allergic response is distinct from other immune reactions in its reliance on IgE, its high-affinity receptor FcepsilonRI, and the primary effector cell-the tissue mast cell. IgE initiates the process of allergic inflammation by binding to FcepsilonRI on inflammatory cells in the airways, the gut, and the skin. Cross-linking of the IgE molecules bound to FcepsilonRI on the surface of mast cells by allergen initiates the early-phase allergic reaction. IgE bound to FcepsilonRI sets off the release of inflammatory mediators, including histamine, leukotrienes and cytokines, and leads to eosinophilic infiltration and inflammation in the affected mucosa or skin. IgE, attached to the low-affinity receptor FcepsilonRII on activated B cells and antigen-presenting cells, enhances allergen capture and type 2 helper T (Th2) cell activation, and may trigger other immunoregulatory pathways. Considerable effort in therapeutic research has focused on interference with IgE function because of its position high in the allergic cascade. Therapy with anti-IgE is one such approach that shows much promise. Large clinical studies of anti-IgE in adults and children have documented its safety and effectiveness by demonstrating the reduction of free IgE in circulation, inhibition of both early- and late-phase allergic reactions, steroid sparing, and protection against exacerbation of asthma and allergic rhinitis.
皮肤试验阳性或血清中特异性免疫球蛋白E(IgE)水平升高可定义为IgE致敏或“特应性”。“过敏”一词指的是特应性IgE介导疾病的临床表现。遗传易感性、幼儿期感染减少,以及对环境过敏原的接触和致敏,共同构成了婴儿期IgE升高的基础。出生后不久IgE升高与后期过敏性疾病的发生有关。IgE既参与速发型超敏反应,也参与慢性过敏性炎症的诱导。过敏反应在对IgE、其高亲和力受体FcepsilonRI以及主要效应细胞——组织肥大细胞的依赖方面,与其他免疫反应不同。IgE通过与气道、肠道和皮肤中的炎症细胞上的FcepsilonRI结合,启动过敏性炎症过程。过敏原使与肥大细胞表面FcepsilonRI结合的IgE分子交联,引发早期过敏反应。与FcepsilonRI结合的IgE引发炎症介质的释放,包括组胺、白三烯和细胞因子,并导致受影响的黏膜或皮肤中的嗜酸性粒细胞浸润和炎症。附着在活化B细胞和抗原呈递细胞上的低亲和力受体FcepsilonRII上的IgE,增强过敏原捕获和2型辅助性T(Th2)细胞活化,并可能触发其他免疫调节途径。由于IgE在过敏级联反应中处于高位,治疗研究中的大量努力都集中在干扰IgE功能上。抗IgE治疗就是这样一种很有前景的方法。针对成人和儿童的抗IgE大型临床研究通过证明循环中游离IgE的减少、对早期和晚期过敏反应的抑制、节省类固醇以及预防哮喘和过敏性鼻炎的加重,记录了其安全性和有效性。