Litcius/Paper detail

Peanut oral immunotherapy in a pediatric allergy clinic: Patient factors associated with clinical outcomes

Katharine Guarnieri, Ian Slack, Vanessa Gadoury-Lévesque, Amy Eapen, Sandra Andorf, Michelle B. Lierl

2021Annals of Allergy Asthma & Immunology14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Additional information is needed to inform optimal patient selection, expected outcomes, and treatment end points for clinical peanut oral immunotherapy (OIT). OBJECTIVE: To provide insight into the optimal patient selection, expected outcomes, and treatment end points for clinical peanut oral immunotherapy by analyzing a real-world peanut OIT cohort. METHODS: Records were reviewed for 174 children undergoing peanut OIT at a pediatric allergy clinic. Patient age, peanut skin prick test results, and peanut-specific immunoglobulin E (sIgE) results, with inclusion of additional foods in OIT, were analyzed for correlations with OIT outcomes. RESULTS: To date, 144 patients have achieved maintenance dosing, 50 of whom transitioned to ad lib twice-weekly peanut ingestion. A total of 30 discontinued OIT. In addition, 47 patients who underwent multifood OIT had no significant difference in reactions (FDR-adjusted P = .48) or time-to-reach maintenance (FDR-adjusted P = .48) compared with those on peanut OIT alone. Age at initiation inversely correlated with achievement of maintenance: 92% of patients 0.5 to less than 5 years, 81% of those 5 to less than 11 years, and 70% of those 11 to less than 18 years reached and continued maintenance (P = .01). Baseline peanut-sIgE level positively correlated with number of reactions during updosing (P < .001) and maintenance (P = .005), though it was not significantly different in patients achieving successful maintenance vs those who discontinued OIT (P = .09). Furthermore, 66% of patients experienced greater than or equal to 1 adverse reaction during OIT. Of those on ad lib peanut ingestion, 2 reported mild reactions after lapses in peanut consumption. CONCLUSION: Clinical peanut OIT has similar outcomes to research protocols. OIT can be successful in older children and those with high peanut-sIgE levels, though these factors affect outcomes. Clinical and laboratory criteria can guide successful transition to intermittent ad lib peanut consumption.

Topics & Concepts

Oral immunotherapyPeanut allergyMedicineOral food challengeAllergyCohortIngestionAdverse effectDosingClinical endpointClinical trialInternal medicineFood allergyPediatricsImmunologyFood Allergy and Anaphylaxis ResearchPeanut Plant Research StudiesCeliac Disease Research and Management
Peanut oral immunotherapy in a pediatric allergy clinic: Patient factors associated with clinical outcomes | Litcius