According to Shams, if patients have predominant late summer - fall allergy symptoms or fail to respond to
ragweed immunotherapy it may prompt further testing and modification of their current treatment regimens.
Not exact matches
Creticos says his team has also begun studies of other non-injectible forms of
immunotherapy, including
ragweed allergy drops, and treatment applications where the allergen is lightly pricked or inserted into the middle layers of the skin.
The study is believed to be the first and largest, multicenter, double - blind, randomized controlled trial of its kind to investigate the use of sublingual
immunotherapy against
ragweed allergy.