detalle del documento
IDENTIFICACIÓN

oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:1086...

Tema
Correspondence
Autor
Schoos, Ann-Marie M. Chan, Edmond S. Wong, Tiffany Erdle, Stephanie C. Chomyn, Alanna Soller, Lianne Mak, Raymond
Langue
en
Editor

World Allergy Organization

Categoría

The World Allergy Organization Journal

Año

2024

fecha de cotización

16/8/2024

Palabras clave
challenge children maintenance oral low-dose immunotherapy
Métrico

Resumen

BACKGROUND: Oral immunotherapy is an effective treatment for food allergies; however, its use in clinical practice is limited by resources and lack of standardized protocols for foods other than peanut.

Previous studies have suggested that shrimp has a higher threshold for reaction than other allergenic foods, suggesting it may be safe to directly administer maintenance doses of immunotherapy.

METHODS: Children aged 3–17 years who had 1) skin prick test ≥3 mm and/or specific IgE level ≥0.35 kU/L and convincing objective IgE-mediated reaction to shrimp, or 2) no ingestion history and specific IgE level ≥5 kU/L, underwent a low-dose oral food challenge to 300 mg shrimp protein, with the goal of continuing daily ingestion of the 300 mg maintenance dose as oral immunotherapy.

RESULTS: Between January 2020 and April 2023, 17 children completed the low-dose oral food challenge.

Nine (53%) tolerated this amount with no reaction, and 8 (47%) had a mild reaction (isolated oral pruritis or redness on chin).

Sixteen (94%) continued maintenance low-dose oral immunotherapy eating 300 mg shrimp protein daily.

None of the patients developed anaphylaxis related to the immunotherapy.

CONCLUSION: Our case series suggests that some shrimp allergic patients being considered for oral immunotherapy should be offered a low-dose oral food challenge, to potentially bypass the build-up phase of immunotherapy.

Schoos, Ann-Marie M.,Chan, Edmond S.,Wong, Tiffany,Erdle, Stephanie C.,Chomyn, Alanna,Soller, Lianne,Mak, Raymond, 2024, Bypassing the build-up phase for oral immunotherapy in shrimp-allergic children, World Allergy Organization

Compartir

Fuente

Artículos recomendados por ES/IODE IA

Hespi: A pipeline for automatically detecting information from hebarium specimen sheets
science recognition institutional detects text-based text pipeline specimen