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Evaluation of clinical outcomes of efficacy in food allergen immunotherapy trials, COFAITH EAACI task force

  • Pablo Rodríguez del Río
  • , Montserrat Álvaro-Lozano
  • , Stefania Arasi
  • , Raphaëlle Bazire
  • , Carmelo Escudero
  • , Nandinee Patel
  • , Monica Sandoval-Ruballos
  • , Marta Vazquez-Ortiz
  • , Anna Nowak-Wegrzyn
  • , Katharina Blümchen
  • , Audrey Dunn Galvin
  • , Antoine Deschildre
  • , Matthew Greenhawt
  • , Sabine Schnadt
  • , Carmen Riggioni
  • , Benjamin C. Remington
  • , Paul Turner
  • , Montserrat Fernandez Rivas
  • Hospital Infantil Universitario Nino Jesus de Madrid
  • Instituto de Salud Carlos III
  • IIS La Princesa
  • SJD Barcelona Children's Hospital
  • Institut de Recerca Sant Joan de Déu
  • University of Barcelona
  • IRCCS Ospedale pediatrico Bambino Gesù - Roma
  • Imperial College London
  • New York University
  • University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn
  • Goethe University Frankfurt
  • Université de Lille
  • University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
  • German Allergy and Asthma Association
  • National University of Singapore
  • National University Hospital
  • University of Nebraska-Lincoln
  • Remington Consulting Group BV
  • Complutense University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Food allergy is a global public health problem that until recent years lacked any aetiological treatment supported by academy, industry and regulators. Food immunotherapy (AIT) is an evolving treatment option, supported by clinical practice and industry trial data. Recent AIT meta-analyses have highlighted the difficulty in pooling safety and efficacy data from AIT trials, due to secondary heterogeneity in the study. An EAACI task force (CO-FAITH) initiated by the Paediatric Section was created to focus on AIT efficacy outcomes for milk, egg and peanut allergy rather than in trial results. A systematic search and a narrative review of AIT controlled clinical trials and large case series was conducted. A total of 63 manuscripts met inclusion criteria, corresponding to 23, 21 and 22 studies of milk, egg and peanut AIT, respectively. The most common AIT efficacy outcome was desensitization, mostly defined as tolerating a maintenance phase dose, or reaching a particular dose upon successful exit oral food challenge (OFC). However, a large degree of heterogeneity was identified regarding the dose quantity defining this outcome. Sustained unresponsiveness and patient-reported outcomes (e.g. quality of life) were explored less frequently, and to date have been most rigorously described for peanut AIT versus other allergens. Change in allergen threshold assessed by OFC remains the most common efficacy measure, but OFC methods suffer from heterogeneity and methodological disparity. This review has identified multiple heterogeneous outcomes related to measuring the efficacy of AIT. Efforts to better standardize and harmonize which outcomes, and how to measure them must be carried out to help in the clinical development of safe and efficacious food allergy treatments.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)793-822
Number of pages30
JournalAllergy: European Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
Volume79
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2024

Keywords

  • allergy treatment
  • epicutaneous immunotherapy
  • food allergy
  • food immunotherapy
  • oral immunotherapy
  • sublingual immunotherapy

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