| Literature DB >> 23282314 |
Ananth Thyagarajan1, A Wesley Burks.
Abstract
Food allergy poses a significant burden on patients, families, health care providers, and the medical system. The increased prevalence of food allergy has brought about investigation as to its cause and new treatments. Currently, the only treatment available is to avoid the food and symptomatically treat any reactions. There are multiple clinical and murine models of food allergy treatment that use allergen specific and nonspecific pathways. Allergen specific treatments use mucosal antigen exposure as a method of inducing desensitization and tolerance. Allergen nonspecific methods act via a more global TH2 suppressive mechanism and may be useful for those patients with multiple food allergies.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 23282314 PMCID: PMC3650994 DOI: 10.1097/WOX.0b013e3181c81fed
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World Allergy Organ J ISSN: 1939-4551 Impact factor: 4.084
Potential Strategies for Treating Food Allergy
| Therapy | Mechanism | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Allergen specific | ||
| Sublingual immunotherapy | Controlled prolonged exposure to antigen promotes switch from Th2 to Th1 response via promotion of Treg activity | Clinical trials |
| Oral immunotherapy | Controlled prolonged exposure to antigen promotes switch from Th2 to Th1 response via promotion of Treg activity | Clinical trials |
| Heat denatured protein | "Natural" immunotherapy by presenting linear but not conformational epitopes to tolerant patients | Clinical trials are on-going |
| Engineered protein immunotherapy | Mutated IgE-binding epitopes prevent allergic reaction while maintaining T cell activity | Early stage clinical trials |
| Peptide vaccine | T cell epitope preservation while preventing IgE-cross linking via small overlapping peptides | Murine models |
| Plasmid DNA encoded vaccines | Tolerance achieved via endogenous production of antigen | Murine models, but strain specific response. No active development |
| Allergen-conjugated immunostimulatory sequence | Promote Th1 response via activation of innate immune pathway (toll-like receptors) | Clinical trials with allergic rhinitis |
| Allergen nonspecific | ||
| Monoclonal anti-IgE therapy | Binds and inactivates IgE and prevents stimulation of high affinity IgE-receptor | Monotherapy studies not active, combination studies with other therapies in clinical trials |
| Chinese herbal medicine | Unknown mechanism, not steroid effect | Early stage clinical trials |
| Cytokine therapy | Interfere with inflammatory pathways | Clinical trials for eosinophilic esophagitis |
Selected SLIT and OIT Studies
| Allergen Received (No. of Subjects) | Length of Therapy | Efficacy | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sublingual | |||
| Enrique et al. [ | Hazelnut (11) | 8-12 weeks | Five (45%) of 11 reached highest dose (20 g) in food challenge. |
| Bird et al. (ongoing) | Peanut (7) | 30 months | At 4 months, no significant change in peanut-specific IgE, IgG, IgG4, or skin prick wheal diameter. |
| Oral | |||
| Patriarca et al. [ | Varied (24) | 18 months | Desensitization was successful in 45 (77%) of 58 treatments. |
| Buchanan et al. [ | Egg (7) | 24 months | Four (57%) of 7 passed food challenge with 14.7 g of egg at conclusion of therapy; 2 passed second challenge 3-4 months later. |
| Staden et al. [ | Cow's milk or egg (45) | 11-59 months | Nine of 25 children (36%) showed tolerance in the treatment and in the control group, 7 of 20 children (35%) were tolerant. |
| Skripak et al. [ | Cow's milk (19) | 5-6 months | Eight out of 19 (42%) passed food challenge with 8 g of milk. Treatment subjects who underwent a posttreatment challenge had significant median increase in threshold dose. |
| Jones et al. [ | Peanut (29) | 18 months | Twenty-seven of 29 (93%) passed food challenge to 3.9 g of peanut. |
| Varshney et al. (ongoing) | Peanut (27) | 1 year | All treatment subjects that have undergone food challenges have tolerated 5 g of peanut. |
Adapted from Burks et al. Oral tolerance, food allergy, and immunotherapy: implications for future treatment. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2008;121:1348.