Vaccines (May 2024)

Eosinophils Play a Surprising Leading Role in Recurrent Urticaria in Horses

  • Katharina Birkmann,
  • Fadi Jebbawi,
  • Nina Waldern,
  • Sophie Hug,
  • Victoria Inversini,
  • Giulia Keller,
  • Anja Holm,
  • Paula Grest,
  • Fabia Canonica,
  • Peter Schmid-Grendelmeier,
  • Antonia Fettelschoss-Gabriel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines12060562
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 6
p. 562

Abstract

Read online

Urticaria, independent of or associated with allergies, is commonly seen in horses and often shows a high reoccurrence rate. Managing these horses is discouraging, and efficient treatment options are lacking. Due to an incidental finding in a study on horses affected by insect bite hypersensitivity using the eosinophil-targeting eIL-5-CuMV-TT vaccine, we observed the prevention of reoccurring seasonal urticaria in four subsequent years with re-vaccination. In an exploratory case series of horses affected with non-seasonal urticaria, we aimed to investigate the role of eosinophils in urticaria. Skin punch biopsies for histology and qPCR of eosinophil associated genes were performed. Further, two severe, non-seasonal, recurrent urticaria-affected horses were vaccinated using eIL-5-CuMV-TT, and urticaria flare-up was followed up with re-vaccination for several years. Eotaxin-2, eotaxin-3, IL-5, CCR5, and CXCL10 showed high sensitivity and specificity for urticarial lesions, while eosinophils were present in 50% of histological tissue sections. The eIL-5-CuMV-TT vaccine reduced eosinophil counts in blood, cleared clinical signs of urticaria, and even prevented new episodes of urticaria in horses with non-seasonal recurrent urticaria. This indicates that eosinophils play a leading role in urticaria in horses, and targeting eosinophils offers an attractive new treatment option, replacing the use of corticosteroids.

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