Handling of allergen immunotherapy in the COVID-19 pandemic: An ARIA-EAACI statement
Date
2020Author
Klimek, L. and Jutel, M. and Akdis, C. and Bousquet, J. and Akdis, M. and Bachert, C. and Agache, I. and Ansotegui, I. and Bedbrook, A. and Bosnic-Anticevich, S. and Canonica, G.W. and Chivato, T. and Cruz, A.A. and Czarlewski, W. and Giacco, S.D. and Du, H. and Fonseca, J.A. and Gao, Y. and Haahtela, T. and Hoffmann-Sommergruber, K. and Ivancevich, J.-C. and Khaltaev, N. and Knol, E.F. and Kuna, P. and Larenas-Linnemann, D. and Melen, E. and Mullol, J. and Naclerio, R. and Ohta, K. and Okamoto, Y. and O'Mahony, L. and Onorato, G.L. and Papadopoulos, N.G. and Pawankar, R. and Pfaar, O. and Samolinski, B. and Schwarze, J. and Toppila-Salmi, S. and Shamji, M.H. and Ventura, M.T. and Valiulis, A. and Yorgancioglu, A. and Matricardi, P. and Zuberbier, T. and ARIA-MASK study group
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Show full item recordAbstract
The current COVID-19 pandemic influences many areas of social life, medical treatments and the way allergy is performed. Allergen-specific immunotherapy (AIT) is one of the most important treatment options for IgE-mediated allergies and is based on immunological effects on the diseased patient. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85084617822&doi=10.1111%2fall.14336&partnerID=40&md5=15347fb4d2bee0e14ce0e0a34780e7d6http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12481/11168
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