1.
Preterm infants with low immunoglobulin G levels have increased risk of neonatal sepsis but do not benefit from prophylactic immunoglobulin G
Sandberg K, Fasth A, Berger A, Eibl M, Isacson K, Lischka A, Pollak A, Tessin I, Thiringer K
Journal of Pediatrics. 2000;137((5):):623-8.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE In a prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled, multicenter study, we evaluated the prevention of neonatal infections with intravenous immunoglobulin G (IVIgG) prophylaxis for preterm infants (gestational age <33 weeks) with umbilical cord blood IgG levels < or =4 g/L. STUDY DESIGN Intravenous IgG or placebo (albumin), 1 g/kg body weight, was given on days 0, 3, 7, 14, and 21 to 81 infants with umbilical cord blood IgG levels < or =4 g/L: (1) IVIgG group, n = 40, mean (SD) gestational age 27.5 (2.2) weeks and birth weight 1.06 (0.39) kg; (2) placebo group, n = 41, mean (SD) gestational age 27.7 (2.5) weeks and birth weight 1.13 (0.38) kg. Infants with umbilical cord blood IgG levels >4 g/L (n = 238) served as a separate comparison group. Neonatal infections according to European Society of Pediatric Infectious Disease criteria were monitored until 28 days of life. RESULTS Infants with IgG levels < or =4 g/L at birth who received IVIgG had no significant reduction in infectious episodes or mortality rate when compared with those given placebo. However, infants with a serum concentration of IgG >4 g/L at birth had significantly fewer infectious episodes (culture-proven sepsis) than infants with low serum concentrations of IgG (< or =4 g/L) when compared at the same gestational ages (26 to 29 weeks, P <.003). CONCLUSIONS Prophylactic immunotherapy with IVIgG did not improve the immune competence in preterm infants with low serum IgG concentrations at birth. We speculate that a spontaneously high serum IgG concentration at birth reflects placenta function and is an indicator of a more mature immune system capable of protecting the preterm infant against severe neonatal infections.
2.
Effect of intravenous immunoglobulin on steroid consumption in patients with severe asthma: a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trial
Salmun LM, Barlan I, Wolf HM, Eibl M, Twarog FJ, Geha RS, Schneider LC
Journal of Allergy & Clinical Immunology. 1999;103((5, Pt 1):):810-5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND There is a significant group of patients with severe asthma who require chronic use of systemic steroids for control of their disease. These patients are at risk for severe side effects from oral steroids. Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) has immunomodulatory properties, and a few open-label trials have suggested its possible benefit in individuals with severe asthma. OBJECTIVE This study was designed to assess the potential benefit of IVIG as a steroid-sparing agent in patients with severe asthma. METHODS Thirty-eight immunocompetent steroid-requiring patients with severe asthma were randomly enrolled in a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of IVIG. RESULTS Of the 38 patients enrolled, 28 patients completed the study. A significant reduction in oral steroid requirement was observed in both the IVIG-treated (n = 16) and the placebo-treated (n = 12) patients. Further exploration of the results showed that IVIG, but not placebo, had a significant steroid-sparing effect in patients requiring high doses of oral steroids (ie, >2000 mg in the year before the study). Within this subgroup, IVIG treatment (n = 9) resulted in a significant decrease in oral steroid requirement, with a median of 16.4 mg/day during the pretreatment period to 3 mg/day during the treatment phase (P =. 0078). No significant decrease in oral steroid requirement was observed in placebo-treated patients (n = 8) within this subgroup. Objective and subjective parameters of the patients' asthma were unchanged in spite of the steroid tapering achieved in the group treated with IVIG. CONCLUSION IVIG may be a useful steroid-sparing agent in patients with severe asthma requiring high doses of oral steroids.