| Literature DB >> 24192789 |
Caroline J Lodge1, Katrina J Allen, Adrian J Lowe, Shyamali C Dharmage.
Abstract
The worldwide prevalence of food allergy appears to be increasing. Early life environmental factors are implicated in the aetiology of this global epidemic. The largest burden of disease is in early childhood, where research efforts aimed at prevention have been focused. Evidence synthesis from good quality systematic reviews is needed. We performed an overview of systematic reviews concerning the prevention and aetiology of food allergy, retrieving 14 systematic reviews, which covered three broad topics: formula (hydrolysed or soy) for the prevention of food allergy or food sensitization; maternal and infant diet and dietary supplements for the prevention of food allergy or food sensitization and hygiene hypothesis-related interventions. Using the AMSTAR criteria for assessment of methodological quality, we found five reviews to be of high quality, seven of medium quality and two of low quality. Overall we found no compelling evidence that any of the interventions that had been systematically reviewed were related to the risk of food allergy. Updating of existing reviews, and production of new systematic reviews, are needed in areas where evidence is emerging for interventions and environmental associations. Furthermore, additional primary studies, with greater numbers of participants and objective food allergy definitions are urgently required.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24192789 PMCID: PMC3863871 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph10115781
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Flow chart of the search process.
Systematic reviews of Infant formulas and the risk of food allergy or food sensitization.
| First author (year) | Designs of the studies included in each review and search dates | Intervention/s/comparisons | Population/s studied | Outcome/s measured | Main Results | Authors’ Conclusion/s |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Partially hydrolysed 100% whey formula (pHF) | RR 0.36, 95% CI (0.15, 0.89) (1 study (n = 67) | Results indicate that pHF is effective in prevention of symptoms of possible CMA compared to StF | ||||
| Soy Formula | CMPI RR = 1.09 (0.45, 2.62) | Feeding with soy formula cannot be recommended for primary prevention for infants at high risk of allergy or food intolerance | ||||
| Hydrolysed infant formula | No evidence to support feeding with hydrolysed formula for prevention of allergy compared to breastfeeding. | |||||
| Comparison of hydrolysed formulas with: breastfeeding, cow’s milk formula, soy formula or combinations | High-risk infants demonstrate significant reductions in the cumulative incidence of atopic disease through | Formulas seem effective but better measures food allergy needed to confirm | ||||
| Comparison of hydrolysed formulas |
| The lack of statistical power of these studies means that more studies will have to be conducted to determine the effect of hydrolysed formulas and allergy |
* Cochrane review; ‡ Includes 2, now discredited, studies by Chandra, but results from these studies not used for form these results; ☺ = Intervention associated with prevention of food allergy or food sensitization; 😐 = Intervention not associated with either increased or decreased risk of food allergy or food sensitization.
Systematic reviews for maternal and infant diet and dietary supplements and the risk of food allergy/sensitization.
| First Author (Year) AMSTAR Quality Meta-analysis MA (+or −) | Study Design/s included in review Search dates | Intervention/s and comparisons | Population/s studied | Outcome measures | Main results | Authors’ Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Omega-3 (n-3 PUFA) supplementation during pregnancy and/or lactation |
| n-3 PUFU protective against egg sensitization | ||||
| Omega-3 (n-3 PUFU) supplementation during pregnancy and/or lactation |
| A non-significant risk reduction in those receiving n-3 PUFU supplements compared to placebo | ||||
| Probiotics (various types and mixtures) |
| Insufficient evidence to recommend probiotics as a preventative measure for food allergy. | ||||
| Maternal dietary antigen avoidance diet (different regimens) during third trimester of pregnancy (2 studies, n = 383) , and pregnancy and lactation (1 study n = 497) |
| Many SPTs showed no evidence of association. Those of note: | No significant effect of maternal antigen avoidance on skin prick tests in infant or child | |||
| Mother’s exposure to peanut (more or less than once per week) | Due to heterogeneous nature and the small number of studies pooling results was not possible, None of the individual results reported by any of the studies showed any significant association between peanut consumption and food allergy or sensitization | Maternal exposure or introduction time of peanuts in a child’s life appears to have no effect on peanut allergy | ||||
| Exclusive breastfeeding for 6 months (n = 70) |
| 37% of infants fed solids at 3 months of age had a history of food allergy up to the age of 1 compared to 7% who were fed breast milk exclusively | Early solid feeding appears to have no association with food allergy |
* Cochrane review; ☺ = Intervention associated with prevention of food allergy or food sensitization; 😐 = Intervention not associated with either increased or decreased risk of food allergy or food sensitization.
Systematic reviews of hygiene hypothesis related interventions and the risk of food allergy or food sensitization.
| First Author (Year) AMSTAR | Study Designs included in review & search dates | Population/s studied and numbers | Intervention/s and comparisons | Outcome measures | Main results | Authors’ Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BCG vaccination | Results not pooled because outcomes were judged to be too heterogeneous on clinical grounds | No protective effect of BCG vaccination on the development of food allergy | ||||
| 32,565 children aged 0–17 | Delivery by C-section | C-section may be associated with increases risk of food allergy. | ||||
| Delivery by | Results were not pooled due to small number of papers included in study | C-section may result in an increased risk of IgE-mediated sensitization |
☹ = Intervention associated with an increased risk of food allergy or food sensitization; 😐 = Intervention not associated with either increased or decreased risk of food allergy or food sensitization.