Immune Systems
Increasingly On Attack
By Rob Stein
First, asthma cases shot up, along with hay
fever and other common allergic reactions, such as eczema. Then, pediatricians
started seeing more children with food allergies. Now, experts are increasingly
convinced that a suspected jump in lupus, multiple sclerosis and other
afflictions caused by misfiring immune systems is real.
Though the data are stronger for some
diseases than others, and part of the increase may reflect better diagnoses,
experts estimate that many allergies and immune-system diseases have doubled,
tripled or even quadrupled in the last few decades, depending on the ailment
and country. Some studies now indicate that more than half of the
The cause remains the focus of intense
debate and study, but some researchers suspect the concurrent trends all may
have a common explanation rooted in aspects of modern living -- including the
"hygiene hypothesis" that blames growing up in increasingly sterile
homes, changes in diet, air pollution, and possibly even obesity and
increasingly sedentary lifestyles.
"We have dramatically changed our lives
in the last 50 years," said Fernando Martinez, who studies allergies at
the
Along with a flurry of research to confirm
and explain the trends, scientists have also begun testing possible remedies.
Some are feeding high-risk children gradually larger amounts of
allergy-inducing foods, hoping to train the immune system not to overreact.
Others are testing benign bacteria or parts of bacteria. Still others have
patients with MS, colitis and related ailments swallow harmless parasitic worms
to try to calm their bodies' misdirected defenses.
"If you look at the incidence of these
diseases, a lot of them began to emerge and become much more common after
parasitic worm diseases were eliminated from our environment," said Robert
Summers of the
Although hay fever, eczema, asthma and food
allergies seem quite different, they are all "allergic diseases"
because they are caused by the immune system responding to substances that are
ordinarily benign, such as pollen or peanuts. Autoimmune diseases also result
from the body's defense mechanisms malfunctioning. But in these diseases, which
include lupus, MS, Type 1 diabetes and inflammatory bowel disease, the immune
system attacks parts of the body such as nerves, the pancreas or digestive
tract.
"Overall, there is very little doubt
that we have seen significant increases," said Syed
Hasan Arshad of the David
Hide Asthma and Allergy Centre in
One reason that many researchers suspect
something about modern living is to blame is that the increases show up largely
in highly developed countries in Europe,
"It's striking," said William Cookson of the
The leading theory to explain the phenomenon
holds that as modern medicine beats back bacterial, viral and parasitic
diseases that have long plagued humanity, immune systems may fail to learn how
to differentiate between real threats and benign invaders, such as ragweed
pollen or food. Or perhaps because they are not busy fighting real threats,
they overreact or even turn on the body's own tissues.
"Our immune systems are much less
busy," said Jean-Francois Bach of the
Several lines of evidence support the
theory. Children raised with pets or older siblings
are less likely to develop allergies, possibly because they are exposed to more
microbes. But perhaps the strongest evidence comes from studies comparing
thousands of people who grew up on farms in
"The data are very strong," said
Erika von Mutius of the
The theory has also gained support from a
variety of animal studies. One, for example, found that rats bred in a sterile
laboratory had far more sensitive immune systems than those reared in the wild,
where they were exposed to infections, microorganisms and parasites.
"It's sort of a smoking gun of the
hygiene hypothesis," said William Parker of
Researchers believe the lack of exposure to
potential threats early in life leaves the immune system with fewer
command-and-control cells known as regulatory T cells, making the system more
likely to overreact or run wild.
"If you live in a very clean society,
you're not going to have a lot of regulatory T cells," Parker said.
While the evidence for the hygiene theory is
accumulating, many say it remains far from proven.
"That theory is so full of holes that
it's clearly not the whole story," said Robert Wood of the Johns Hopkins
School of Medicine.
It does not explain, for example, the rise
in asthma, since that disease occurs much more commonly in poor, inner-city
areas where children are exposed to more cockroaches and rodents that may
trigger it, Wood and others said.
Several alternative theories have been
presented. Some researchers blame exposure to fine particles in air pollution,
which may give the immune system more of a hair trigger, especially in
genetically predisposed individuals. Others say obesity and a sedentary
lifestyle may play a role. Still others wonder whether eating more processed
food or foods processed in different ways, or changes in the balance of certain
vitamins that can affect the immune system, such as vitamins C and E and fish
oil, are a factor.
"Cleaning up the food we eat has
actually changed what we're eating," said Thomas Platts-Mills
of the
But many researchers believe the hygiene hypothesis
is the strongest, and that the reason one person develops asthma instead of hay
fever or eczema or lupus or MS is because of a genetic predisposition.
"We believe it's about half and
half," Cookson said. "You need
environmental factors and you need genetic susceptibility as well."
Some researchers have begun to try to
identify specific genes that may be involved, as well as specific components of
bacteria or other pathogens that might be used to train immune systems to
respond appropriately.
"If we could mimic what is happening in
these farm environments, we could protect children and prevent asthma,
allergies and other diseases," von Mutius said.
Some researchers are trying to help people
who are at risk for allergies or already ill with autoimmune diseases.
With new research suggesting that food
allergies may be occurring earlier in life and lasting longer, several small
studies have been done or are underway in which children at risk for milk, egg
and peanut allergies are given increasing amounts of those foods, beginning
with tiny doses, to try to train the immune system.
"I'm very encouraged," said Wesley
Burks, a professor of pediatrics at Duke who has done some of the studies.
"I'm hopeful that in five years, there may be some type of therapy from
this."
Another promising line of research involves
giving patients microscopic parasitic worms to try to tamp down the immune
system.
"We've seen rather dramatic
improvements in patients' conditions," said Summers
of the
Doctors in Argentina reported last year that
MS patients who had intestinal parasites fared better than those who did not,
and researchers at the University of Wisconsin are planning to launch another
study as early as next month testing pig worms in 20 patients with the disease.
"We hope to show whether this treatment
has promise and is worth exploring further in a larger study," said John
O. Fleming, a professor of neurology who is leading the effort.
Overactive Immunity

Source: