| Literature DB >> 23835522 |
Carina Venter1, Trevor Brown, Neil Shah, Joanne Walsh, Adam T Fox.
Abstract
The UK NICE guideline on the Diagnosis and Assessment of Food Allergy in Children and Young People was published in 2011, highlighting the important role of primary care physicians, dietitians, nurses and other community based health care professionals in the diagnosis and assessment of IgE and non-IgE-mediated food allergies in children. The guideline suggests that those with suspected IgE-mediated disease and those suspected to suffer from severe non-IgE-mediated disease are referred on to secondary or tertiary level care. What is evident from this guideline is that the responsibility for the diagnostic food challenge, ongoing management and determining of tolerance to cow's milk in children with less severe non-IgE-mediated food allergies is ultimately that of the primary care/community based health care staff, but this discussion fell outside of the current NICE guideline. Some clinical members of the guideline development group (CV, JW, ATF, TB) therefore felt that there was a particular need to extend this into a more practical guideline for cow's milk allergy. This subset of the guideline development group with the additional expertise of a paediatric gastroenterologist (NS) therefore aimed to produce a UK Primary Care Guideline for the initial clinical recognition of all forms of cow's milk allergy and the ongoing management of those with non-severe non-IgE-mediated cow's milk allergy in the form of algorithms. These algorithms will be discussed in this review paper, drawing on guidance primarily from the UK NICE guideline, but also from the DRACMA guidelines, ESPGHAN guidelines, Australian guidelines and the US NIAID guidelines.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23835522 PMCID: PMC3716921 DOI: 10.1186/2045-7022-3-23
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Allergy ISSN: 2045-7022 Impact factor: 5.871
Figure 1Strengths and main clinical emphases of the NICE guideline.
Figure 2Different presentations of cow’s milk allergy in infancy.
Figure 3Diagnosis and management of mild to moderate non-IgE CMA in UK primary care.
Figure 4Formulas available for the treatment of CMA in the UK.
Guidance on formula choice
| Anaphylaxis | AAF | AAF | No recommendation | AAF |
| Acute urticaria or angioedema | eHF | No specific mention but eHF in general as 1st line treatment for CMA apart from specific indications for AAF | No recommendation | eHF if < 6 months |
| Soya if > 6 months | ||||
| Atopic eczema/dermatitis | eHF | No specific mention but eHF in general as 1st line treatment | No recommendation | eHF if < 6 months |
| Soya if > 6 months | ||||
| eHF if >6 months if also presenting with faltering growth | ||||
| Immediate gastrointestinal allergy | eHF | No specific mention but eHF in general as 1st line treatment | No recommendation | eHF if < 6 months |
| Soya if > 6 months | ||||
| eHF if >6 months if also presenting with faltering growth | ||||
| Allergic eosinophilic oesophagitis | AAF | AAF (as well as other eosinophilic disorders of the gut) | AAF/hypoallergenic formula (NIAID) | AAF |
| Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GORD) | eHF | No specific mention but eHF in general as 1st line treatment | No recommendation | eHF if < 6 months |
| Soya if > 6 months | ||||
| eHF if >6 months if also presenting with faltering growth | ||||
| Cow’s milk protein-induced enteropathy | eHF | (Severe enteropathy complicated by faltering growth and hypoprotenemia) AAF | eHF/AAF | eHF if < 6 months |
| Soya if > 6 months | ||||
| eHF if >6 if also presenting with faltering growth | ||||
| Food protein-induced enterocolitis syndrome (FPIES) | eHF | AAF | Hypoallergenic formula (NIAID) eHF/AAF | eHF |
| CM protein-induced gastroenteritis and proctocolitis | eHF | No specific mention but eHF in general as 1st line treatment | | Gastro-enteritis: |
| eHF if < 6 months | ||||
| Soya if > 6 months | ||||
| eHF if >6 months if also presenting with faltering growth | ||||
| Proctitis: eHF | ||||
| Severe irritability (colic) | eHF | No specific mention but eHF in general as 1st line treatment | Hypoallergenic formula | eHF if < 6 months |
| Soya if > 6 months | ||||
| eHF if >6 months if also presenting with faltering growth | ||||
| Constipation/Diarrhoea | eHF | No specific mention but eHF in general as 1st line treatment | No recommendation | eHF if < 6 months |
| Soya if > 6 months | ||||
| eHF if >6 months if also presenting with faltering growth | ||||
| Milk-induced chronic pulmonary disease (Heiner’s syndrome) | AAF | No recommendation | No recommendation | No recommendation |
| Faltering growth | No recommendation | AAF (particularly presenting with enterocolitis complicated by hypoprotenemia and anaemia) | No recommendation | See with other conditions – but defaults to eHF |
| Breast fed infants – not responding on maternal milk avoidance | No recommendation | AAF | “alternative formulas” eHF/AAF | No recommendation |
| Multiple food allergies | No recommendation | eHF/AAF | No recommendation | No recommendation |
| Severe atopic eczema/dermatitis | No recommendation | AAF (particularly if presenting with faltering growth complicated by hypoprotenemia and anaemia) | No recommendation | No recommendation |