| Literature DB >> 31052434 |
Amelia Licari1, Sara Manti2,3, Alessia Marseglia4, Ilaria Brambilla5, Martina Votto6, Riccardo Castagnoli7, Salvatore Leonardi8, Gian Luigi Marseglia9.
Abstract
Food allergies are an increasingly public health problem, affecting up to 10% of children and causing a significant burden on affected patients, resulting in dietary restrictions, fear of accidental ingestion and related risk of severe reactions, as well as a reduced quality of life. Currently, there is no specific cure for a food allergy, so the only available management is limited to strict dietary avoidance, education on prompt recognition of symptoms, and emergency treatment of adverse reactions. Several allergen specific- and nonspecific-therapies, aiming to acquire a persistent food tolerance, are under investigation as potential treatments; however, to date, only immunotherapy has been identified as the most promising therapeutic approach for food allergy treatment. The aim of this review is to provide an updated overview on changes in the treatment landscape for food allergies.Entities:
Keywords: allergen-nonspecific therapy; allergen-specific therapy; biologics; children; food allergy
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31052434 PMCID: PMC6571952 DOI: 10.3390/medicina55050120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
List of licensed and potential strategies for treating food allergies.
| Therapy | Mechanism of Action | Population | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Allergen specific | |||
| Allergy immunotherapy | Prolonged exposure to antigen restores the Th1/Th2 * balance, promoting Treg * activity | Pediatric | Clinical trials |
| Allergen non specific | |||
| Cytokines | Influence with inflammatory pathways | NA * | Murine models |
| Toll Like receptors | Activate the immune response | NA | Murine models |
| Cellular target | Trigger immune tolerance | NA | Murine models |
| Anti-IgE | Inactivaction IgE * | Pediatric | Clinical trials |
| Anti-IgE with OIT | Improve efficacy OIT | Pediatric | Clinical trials |
| Probiotics | Immune-modulation Competitive exclusion | Pediatric | Clinical trials |
| Gene therapy | Persistent release of anti-human IgE | NA | Murine models |
* OIT: oral immunotherapy; SLIT: sublingual immunotherapy; EPIT: epicutaneous immunotherapy; Th1: lymphocytes T helper 1; Th2: lymphocytes T helper 2; Treg: Regulatory T; NA: not applicable; IgE: immunoglobulin E.
Clinical development program for biologicals as monotherapies or as adjunctive treatments with immunotherapy in food allergy treatment.
| Clinical Trial Identifier | Study Title | Status | Phase | Estimated Enrollment (N. pts) * | Ages Eligible for Study | Primary Outcome Measures | Interventions | Drug Dosage | Preliminary Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | NCT02879006 | E-B-FAHF-2, Multi OIT * and Omalizumab for Food Allergy | Recruiting | 2 | 34 | 6 to 40 y * | Sustained unresponsiveness | Chinese Herbal Medication | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| 2 | NCT02643862 | Study Using Omalizumab in Rush Multi Oral Immunotherapy in Multi Food Allergic Patients (MAP-X) | Completed | 2 | 48 | 4 to 55 y | Desensitization measured by proportion of FA * participants who pass a DBPCFC * to 2000 mg protein for each of 2 allergens at week 36 | Omalizumab | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| 3 | NCT03181009 | Multi OIT to Test Immune Markers After Minimum Maintenance Dose | Recruiting | 2 | 60 | 2 to 25 y | Change in allergen-specific serum IgG4 * and IgE | Omalizumab | Omalizumab: subjects ≥ 4 yrs receive 150 mg *. Subjects ≤ 4 yrs receive 75 mg | Not applicable |
| 4 | NCT02626611 | Multi Immunotherapy to Test Tolerance and Omalizumab | Completed | 2 | 70 | 4 to 55 y | The number of participants able to tolerate an oral food challenge to 2000 mg at least of 2 allergens at week 36 | Omalizumab | Omalizumab: not applicable | Not applicable |
| 5 | NCT01510626 | Omalizumab With Oral Food Immunotherapy With Food Allergies Open Label Safety Study in a Single Center | Completed | 1 | 35 | 4 to 55 y | Number of adverse events in the treatment population | Omalizumab | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| 6 | NCT00949078 | Omalizumab in the Treatment of Peanut Allergy | Completed | 2 | 51 | 18 to 50 y |
Number of pts who experienced a decrease in Pn-BHR * AUC * of >80% compared with baseline values before week 8 percent change in peanut specific IgE from baseline to after Pn-BHR response percentage peanut specific IgE after pn-BHR response total IgE after pn-BHR response Dose of peanut protein inducing allergic symptoms at OFC1 * Dose of peanut protein inducing allergic symptoms at OFC 2 Dose of peanut protein inducing allergic symptoms at OFC 3 Omalizumab received before OFC 2 number of doses omalizumab received before OFC 2 | Omalizumab | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| 7 | NCT01781637 | Peanut Reactivity Reduced by Oral Tolerance in an Anti-IgE Clinical Trial | Active, not yet recruiting | 1, 2 | 36 | 7 to 25 y | Tolerance of 2000 mg 6 weeks after last dose of omalizumab/placebo | Omalizumb | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| 8 | NCT03881696 | Omalizumab as Monotherapy and as Adjunct Therapy to Multi-Allergen OIT in Food Allergic Participants | Not yet recruiting | 3 | 225 | 2 to 55 y | Number of participants by stage 1 treatment group, omalizumab versus placebo, who successfully consume ≥600 mg of peanut protein without dose-limiting symptoms during the DBPCFC conducted at the end of treatment stage 1 | Omalizumab | Omalizumab: 75 to 150 mg | Not applicable |
| 9 | NCT02402231 | Treatment of Severe Peanut Allergy With Omalizumab and Oral Immunotherapy (FASTX) | Active, not recruiting | 2 | 23 | 12 to 22 y | Peanut challenge | Omalizumab | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| 10 | NCT01157117 | OIT and Omalizumab in Cow’s Milk Allergy | Completed | 2 | 77 | 7 to 35 y | Percentage of Subjects in the Omalizumab Group vs. Placebo Group Developing Clinical Tolerance to Milk | Omalizumab | Omalizumab: not applicable: | Omalizumab vs * |
| 11 | NCT03679676 | Clinical Study Using Biologics to Improve Multi OIT Outcomes | Not yet recruiting | 2 | 200 | 6 to 21 y | Successful food challenges to two or more FA at week 38 between cohort omalizumab and cohort placebo | Omalizumab | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| 12 | NCT00968110 | Omalizumab Treatment for Milk Allergic Children | Completed | 1 | 10 | 4 to 18 y | The major goal of this study is to assess the safety of Omalizumab in young children, and the safety of oral desensitization in patients pretreated with Omalizumab | Omalizumab | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| 13 | NCT00086606 | A Safety and Efficacy Study of Omalizumab in Peanut Allergy | Terminated | 2 | 150 | 6 to 75 y | Not applicable | Omalizumab | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| 14 | NCT00932282 | Peanut Oral Immunotherapy and Anti-IgE for Peanut Allergy (PAIE/Omalizumab) | Terminated | 1, 2 | 13 | 12 y and older | The percentage of subjects who pass the 20 mg peanut flour (~50% peanut protein) OFC 2–4 weeks after discontinuing peanut OIT therapy | Peanut Oral Immunotherapy | Peanut Oral Immunotherapy: | Not applicable |
| 15 | NCT00382148 | A Study of Omalizumab in Peanut-Allergic Subjects Previously Enrolled in Study Q2788g | Completed | 2 | 10 | 6 to 75 y | Serious Adverse Events | Omalizumab | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| 16 | Omalizumab Enhances Oral Desensitization in Peanut Allergic Patients | Completed | 1, 2 | 13 | 7 to 25 y | Number of participants that tolerated rapid oral peanut desensitization to a dose of 500 mg peanut flour | Omalizumab | Not applicable | Not applicable |
* OIT: oral immunotherapy; pts: patients; yrs: years; FA: food allergy; DBPCFC: Double-blind, placebo-controlled food challenge; Ig: immunoglobulin; mg: milligrams; Pn-BHR: peanut allergen induced basophil histamine release; AUC: Area under the curve; OFC: oral food challenge; g: grams; vs.: versus; y: years.