Oral Immunotherapy for Treatment of Egg Allergy in Children
Duke Medical Center · Duke University · +11 more institutions
Abstract
For egg allergy, dietary avoidance is the only currently approved treatment. We evaluated oral immunotherapy using egg-white powder for the treatment of children with egg allergy.
In this double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study, 55 children, 5 to 11 years of age, with egg allergy received oral immunotherapy (40 children) or placebo (15). Initial dose-escalation, build-up, and maintenance phases were followed by an oral food challenge with egg-white powder at 10 months and at 22 months. Children who successfully passed the challenge at 22 months discontinued oral immunotherapy and avoided all egg consumption for 4 to 6 weeks. At 24 months, these children underwent an oral food challenge with egg-white powder and a cooked egg to test for sustained unresponsiveness. Children who passed this challenge at 24 months were placed on a diet with ad libitum egg consumption and were evaluated for continuation of sustained unresponsiveness at 30 months and 36 months.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 35.58
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 39
Authors
14- AWA. Wesley BurksCorresponding
Duke Medical Center, Duke University
- SMStacie M. Jones
Arkansas Children's Hospital, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
- RARobert A. Wood
Johns Hopkins University, University Medical Center
- DMDavid M. Fleischer
National Jewish Health, University of Colorado Denver
- SHScott H. Sicherer
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Topics & keywords
- Oral immunotherapy
- Egg allergy
- Immunotherapy
- Allergy
- Medicine
- Immunology
- Dermatology
- Food allergy
- Good health and well-being