| Literature DB >> 35334974 |
Frances Connor1,2, Silvia Salvatore3, Enza D'Auria4, Maria Elisabetta Baldassarre5, Miriam Acunzo4, Gaia Di Bella3, Ilaria Farella6, Simona Sestito7, Licia Pensabene7.
Abstract
Constipation is a very common disorder, mostly functional in nature, that may persist for years in up to 35-52% of children. Food allergy prevalence, severity and persistence are increasing over time, and cows' milk protein is the commonest food allergen recognised to affect gastrointestinal motility in children. There is mounting evidence of the role of cows' milk (CM) allergy (CMA) in children with constipation. With this narrative review, we aim to provide clinicians with an updated and critical overview of food allergy-associated constipation. We searched Embase, Medline and the Cochrane Library, using keywords related to the topic. Only reviews and studies including children aged 0-17 years that were published in English were considered. Constipation has been reported in 4.6% of infants with CMA; the prevalence of food allergy underlying chronic constipation in children resistant to conventional treatment and presenting to tertiary clinics ranges between 28% and 78%. The identification of predisposing risk factors and of a specific phenotype of food allergy-induced constipation remains elusive. No allergic tests, radiological or motility investigations achieve sufficient sensitivity and specificity to screen children for CMA-related constipation. A 4-week cows' milk protein (CMP) elimination diet may be considered for children with chronic constipation resistant to conventional treatment and who lack alarm sign/symptoms of organic diseases. In subjects with ameliorated symptoms on CMP elimination, the diagnosis of CMA should be confirmed by a food challenge to avoid an unnecessary protracted diet.Entities:
Keywords: allergic disease; children; constipation; cows’ milk allergy; food allergy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35334974 PMCID: PMC8955686 DOI: 10.3390/nu14061317
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Prospective clinical trials of cows’ milk protein elimination diet in childhood constipation. Adapted with permission from ref. [97].
| Year | Author | Country | Number of Cases | Study Type | Age Range (years) | Mean ( | Responders to Dairy Elimination (%) | Response Confirmed with Challenge (%) | Treatment Dependent or Resistant | Setting (Primary Care, Secondary, Gastro) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1995 | Iacono G. et al. [ | Italy | 27 | Prospective, open challenge | 0.5–3 | 1.7 | 78% | 78% | either | ped GE |
| 1998 | Iacono G. et al. [ | Italy | 65 | Prospective crossover RCT DBPCFC | 1–6 | 2.9 | 68% | 68% | resistant | ped GE |
| 1999 | Shah N. et al. [ | United Kingdom | 14 | Prospective | 0.5–6.7 | 3.1 (med) | 79% * | n/a | resistant | ped GE |
| 2001 | Daher S. et al. [ | Brazil | 25 | Prospective, open challenge | 0.25–11 | nr | 28% | 28% | resistant | ped GE |
| 2004 | Turunen S. et al. [ | Finland | 35 | Prospective, open challenge | 3–15 | 8.3 | 83% | 34% | either | ped GE |
| 2005 | Carroccio A. et al. [ | Italy | 52 | Prospective with DBPCFC | 4 (med) | 46% * | 46% | resistant | ped GE | |
| 2006 | Iacono G. et al. [ | Italy | 36 | Prospective with DBPCFC | 0.75–10 | 3.6 (med) | 39% * | 39% | resistant | ped GE |
| 2008 | Simeone D. et al. [ | Italy | 11 | Prospective | nr | nr | 0 | n/a | resistant | primary |
| 2009 | Borrelli O. et al. [ | Italy | 33 | Prospective with DBPCFC | 1–10.8 | 4 (med) | 30% * | 30% | resistant | ped GE |
| 2009 | El-Hodhod M.A. et al. [ | Egypt | 27 | Prospective, long follow up | 0.7–4 | nr | 78% | 78% | resistant | ped GE |
| 2010 | Irastorza I. et al. [ | Spain | 69 | Prospective, open challenge | 0.5–14 | 5 | 51% | 39% | either | ped GE |
| 2012 | Dehghani S.M. et al. [ | Iran | 70 | Prospective, case controlled RCT | 1–13 | 4.6 | 80% | 34% | resistant | ped GE |
| 2013 | Crowley E.T. et al. [ | Australia | 30 | Prospective crossover RCT with DBPCFC | 1.5–12 | nr | 81% | 33% | resistant | secondary |
| 2021 | Mohamma-di Bourkheili A. et al. [ | Iran | 35 | Prospective case controlled RCT | 4–14 | 5 | 71% | n/a | resistant | ped GE |
* Stars indicate studies where additional children were found to be allergic to other foods (commonly wheat, egg, soy, corn) or to multiple foods including dairy, manifesting as constipation. Setting: ped GE = paediatric gastroenterology center; primary= primary care; secondary=secondary care (hospital-based paediatric referral centre). nr = not reported. = mean, med = median.
Figure 1Response rates to CMP elimination diet and challenge in children with constipation, according to age of study participants, showing higher response rates in younger patients. Y axis indicates response to diet as a percentage. X axis indicates age of study participants in years, by measures of central tendency (mean age in blue or median age in orange). Bubble size indicates number of participants. Study details are in Table 1 above.
Studies on investigations for detection of cows’ milk allergy in which constipation was reported by some participants.
| Author | Year | Age Range (months) | Number in Study | Number with Constipation Prior to CMP-Free Diet | Constipation Responders to Dairy Free Diet/Challenge: Number (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| De Boissieu, D. et al. [ | 2003 | 2–57 | 35 | 4 | 3 (75%) |
| Cudowska, B. et al. [ | 2010 | 6–144 | 28 | 7 | 3 (43%) |
| Kalach, N. et al. [ | 2013 | 1–18 | 25 | 5 | 2(40%) |
| Mowszet, K. et al. [ | 2014 | 3–36 | 39 | not reported | 2 |
Figure 2Schematic showing proportions of children in tertiary clinics responding to initial phases of management for chronic constipation.