Therapy Allergen Ordinance (TAO): The final stretch
Vera Mahler1, Diana Hartenstein1, Iris Lauer1, Stefan Vieths2, Claudia Ruoff3, Julia Zimmer1, Susanne Kaul1
1 Allergology Division, 2 President of the Paul-Ehrlich-Institut; Molecular Allergology Research Group, and 3 Legal Affairs Section, Safety of Biomedicines and Diagnostics Division, Paul-Ehrlich-Institut, Langen, Germany
DOI 10.5414/ALX02594E
Abstract
The Therapy Allergen Ordinance (TAO) aims to migrate allergen immunotherapy (AIT) products for the treatment of common allergies, which were previously marketed in Germany as named patient products (NPPs), into authorized products provided their quality, efficacy, and safety are adequately shown. The TAO applies to all NPPs containing active ingredients based on the following allergen sources: house dust mites, bee venom, wasp venom, pollen from sweet grasses (excluding maize), birch, alder, or hazel. The last product-specific deadlines granted under the TAO for the submission of clinical data relevant to the marketing authorization process will expire in 2026. The subsequent final assessment of the updated marketing authorization application (MAA) is carried out by the competent authority, the Paul-Ehrlich-Institut. During this period of processing by the competent authority, the products remain marketable until a decision regarding the MAA has been reached. Currently (as of August 08, 2025), 40 AIT products are still marketable under the transitional provisions of the TAO (10 preparations for the treatment of allergies to house dust mites, 10 against tree pollen allergies, 16 against grass pollen allergies, and 4 mixed preparations containing non-homologous allergen groups). For 8 of these products, pharmaceutical companies have initiated the withdrawal of MAA as of October 01, 2025 or January 31, 2026, respectively. Prior to the final assessment of the updated MAAs, the competent authority is unable to make any public statements as to whether the individual applications for the remaining 32 products under the transitional provision will be concluded positively with the granting of the marketing authorization or its rejection. With the rejection of a marketing authorization, the product-specific marketability ends immediately, i.e., there is no additional sell-off period for the TAO products concerned. If a marketing authorization is granted, the marketability of the specific product is perpetuated.
Author Details
Authors
Departments
- 1 Allergology Division,
- 2 President of the Paul-Ehrlich-Institut; Molecular Allergology Research Group, and
- 3 Legal Affairs Section, Safety of Biomedicines and Diagnostics Division, Paul-Ehrlich-Institut, Langen, Germany
Address
Prof. Vera Mahler, MD, Abteilung Allergologie, Paul-Ehrlich-Institut, Paul-Ehrlich-Str. 51-59, 63225 Langen, Germany
Email:
[email protected]
Citation
Vera Mahler, Diana Hartenstein, Iris Lauer, Stefan Vieths, Claudia Ruoff, Julia Zimmer, and Susanne Kaul.Therapy Allergen Ordinance (TAO): The final stretch. Allergologie select. 2025; 9: 93-99. doi: 10.5414/ALX02594E.