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Design of the Intervention to Reduce Early Peanut Allergy in Children ( <scp>iREACH</scp> ): A <scp>practice‐based</scp> clinical trial

Lucy Bilaver, Adolfo J. Ariza, Helen J. Binns, Jialing Jiang, R. D. Cohn, Samantha Sansweet, Haley Hultquist, Joy Laurienzo Panza, Alkis Togias, Ruchi S. Gupta

2024Pediatric Allergy and Immunology11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Introducing peanut products early can prevent peanut allergy (PA). The "Addendum guidelines for the prevention of PA in the United States" (PPA guidelines) recommend early introduction of peanut products to low and moderate risk infants and evaluation prior to starting peanut products for infants at high risk for PA (those with severe eczema and/or egg allergy). Rapid adoption of guidelines could aid in lowering the prevalence of PA. The Intervention to Reduce Early (Peanut) Allergy in Children (iREACH) trial was designed to promote PPA guideline adherence by pediatric clinicians. METHODS: A two-arm, cluster-randomized, controlled clinical trial was designed to measure the effectiveness of an intervention that included clinician education and accompanying clinical decision support tools integrated in electronic health records (EHR) versus standard care. Randomization was at the practice level (n = 30). Primary aims evaluated over an 18-month trial period assess adherence to the PPA guidelines using EHR documentation at 4- and 6-month well-child care visits aided by natural language processing. A secondary aim will evaluate the effectiveness in decreasing the incidence of PA by age 2.5 years using EHR documentation and caregiver surveys. The unit of observation for evaluations are individual children with clustering at the practice level. CONCLUSION: Application of this intervention has the potential to inform the development of strategies to speed implementation of PPA guidelines.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePeanut allergyGuidelineIntervention (counseling)Randomized controlled trialClinical trialPediatricsDocumentationRandomizationIncidence (geometry)Cluster randomised controlled trialFamily medicineAllergyFood allergyNursingInternal medicineImmunologyOpticsProgramming languagePhysicsComputer sciencePathologyFood Allergy and Anaphylaxis ResearchRespiratory and Cough-Related ResearchAsthma and respiratory diseases