November 2, 2013

Evaluation of nasal symptoms induced by platelet activating factor, after nasal challenge in both healthy and allergic rhinitis subjects pretreated with rupatadine, levocetirizine or placebo in a cross-over study design

Open Access
Short report


Rosa Muñoz-CanoAntonio ValeroIgnacio IzquierdoJaume Sánchez-LópezAlejandro DoménechJoan BartraJoaquim Mullol and Cesar Picado
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Allergy, Asthma & Clinical Immunology 2013, 9:43  doi:10.1186/1710-1492-9-43
Published: 1 November 2013

Abstract (provisional)

Background

Platelet-activating factor (PAF) is produced by most inflammatory cells and it is involved in inflammatory and allergic reactions.We aimed to assess the anti-PAF effects of rupatadine and levocetirizine in the upper airways.
Findings: Healthy volunteers (HV, N = 10) and seasonal allergic rhinitis (SAR, N = 10) asymptomatic patients were treated out of the pollen season with either rupatadine 20 mg, levocetirizine 10 mg, or placebo once a day during 5 days prior to the PAF nasal challenge. Total 4-nasal symptom score (T4SS) and nasal patency (Vol2-5, by acoustic rhinometry) were assessed from 0 to 240 minutes after a repeated PAF challenge. In SAR patients but not in HV, both rupatadine and levocetirizine showed a trend to decrease PAF-induced T4SS from 60 to 120 minutes. Rupatadine but not levocetirizine caused a significant reduction (p - 0.05) of T4SS area under the curve compared to placebo. Rupatadine and levocetirizine caused no significant changes on nasal patency compared to placebo.

Conclusions

These results suggest that both rupatadine and levocetirizine showed a tendency decrease toward nasal symptoms, but only rupatadine significally reduces the overall nasal symptoms (AUC) induced by PAF in SAR patients.

The complete article is available as a provisional PDF. The fully formatted PDF and HTML versions are in production.

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