Funding Could Lead to Better Treatments for Life-Threatening Allergies

Scientists at Benaroya Research Institute at Virginia Mason (BRI) recently received a $2.2 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to find a unique biomarker that initiates and drives allergies. This grant expands on previous discoveries that led to the isolation of a type of white blood cells that show up only in people with allergic disease. 

Written byBenaroya Research Institute at Virginia Mason
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“We hope to identify a biomarker at the top of the allergic chain reaction that will predict the onset of allergy and will lead to novel vaccine approaches,” says Erik Wambre, PhD, BRI Principal Investigator for the grant. “Our aim is to develop a simple blood test to predict the likelihood of resolution of an allergy during therapy and to identify people who will develop an allergy before the first symptoms are experienced. This is especially important in at-risk people such as children with a life-threatening food allergy.”

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