Literature DB >> 23676568

Oral and sublingual peanut immunotherapy is not ready for general use.

Matthew J Greenhawt1.   

Abstract

Food oral immunotherapy (OIT) is an investigational peanut allergy treatment aimed to achieve specific oral tolerance induction. Allergic children are given titrated oral (or sublingual) doses of their allergen on a daily basis, unlike in subcutaneous immunotherapy (SCIT). OIT is theorized to cause a shift from a Th2 to a Th1 regulatory environment, reflected by increases in food-specific IgG4/IgE, and the production of FoxP3. Peanut OIT holds special promise because peanut allergy has an unfavorable natural history and is rarely outgrown. A high percentage of the participants experience symptoms during peanut OIT, including anaphylaxis, warranting epinephrine and/or discontinuation of therapy. This is a concerning fact given that the studies have mostly targeted only older children, with less historical reactivity for enrollment. The handful of peanut OIT studies have shown that some participants can be desensitized to peanut, but none have shown that long-term tolerance can be reestablished. Factors predictive of which patients are most likely to succeed and become desensitized through OIT are unknown. Some private practices have begun offering peanut OIT as a therapy. Such practice is potentially dangerous given the safety and efficacy of OIT in randomized controlled clinical trials is still not well established. Therefore, until further investigation emerges that conclusively demonstrates OIT is safe, intermediate and long-term outcomes are better established, the number of participants that experience symptoms is reduced, and proof of concept established in patients of all ages, (irrespective of past reaction severity), OIT is not ready for use in the general allergy practice.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23676568     DOI: 10.2500/aap.2013.34.3661

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Allergy Asthma Proc        ISSN: 1088-5412            Impact factor:   2.587


  6 in total

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Authors:  Joseph A Bellanti; Russell A Settipane
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Authors:  Ramon Bencharitiwong; Hanneke P M van der Kleij; Stef J Koppelman; Anna Nowak-Węgrzyn
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Review 3.  Immunotherapy in allergy and cellular tests: state of art.

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4.  From the common cough to hereditary angioedema.

Authors:  Joseph A Bellanti; Russell A Settipane
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5.  Sublingual immunotherapy for peanut allergy: Long-term follow-up of a randomized multicenter trial.

Authors:  A Wesley Burks; Robert A Wood; Stacie M Jones; Scott H Sicherer; David M Fleischer; Amy M Scurlock; Brian P Vickery; Andrew H Liu; Alice K Henning; Robert Lindblad; Peter Dawson; Marshall Plaut; Hugh A Sampson
Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol       Date:  2015-02-03       Impact factor: 10.793

6.  Allergist-reported trends in the practice of food allergen oral immunotherapy.

Authors:  Matthew J Greenhawt; Brian P Vickery
Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract       Date:  2014-10-29
  6 in total

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