Recent claims have been made that sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) may be a
viable alternative to injection immunotherapy (SIT). Animal studies show th
at when allergens are administered topically, they are handled differently,
and IgE responses can be reduced. Most published studies of human SLIT hav
e been small but show fairly consistent benefits on symptom scores, with fe
w systemic side effects. Objective measures of allergen reactivity usually
do not change. Relatively few subjects have been treated in SLIT trials com
pared with the numbers that would be required to validate new drug therapie
s. On the plus side, SLIT appears to work in adults and in children; it off
ers some logistic advantages and seems to be safe. Giving allergen by mouth
rather than by injection should decrease the costs of immunotherapy, but t
he cumulative dose of allergen used in SLIT has been between 20 to 375 time
s the dose given in conventional SIT. Further cost-benefit analysis is need
ed. On the other hand, standard SIT is effective and is supported by better
clinical and experimental evidence. The balance sheet for SLIT is improvin
g, but on the current evidence, SLIT requires further evaluation before it
could be recommended for use in routine clinical practice.