Oral Immunotherapy in Children with IgE-mediated Hen's Egg Allergy: Follow-ups at 2.5 and 7 Years

Background The present report was a follow-up investigation at 2.5- and 7-year intervals of a previous study of 20 children with moderate-to-severe immunoglobulin E (IgE) mediated hen's egg (HE) allergy who received oral immunotherapy (OIT) with raw HE. The study design of the previous study di...

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Main Authors: Paolo Meglio MD, Paolo Gianni Giampietro MD, Rossella Carello MD, Elena Galli MD, FhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-10-01
Series:Allergy & Rhinology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2500/ar.2017.8.0211
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spelling doaj-4d1f059c9c0e434d8207fd0c741714342020-11-25T03:48:00ZengSAGE PublishingAllergy & Rhinology2152-65672017-10-01810.2500/ar.2017.8.0211Oral Immunotherapy in Children with IgE-mediated Hen's Egg Allergy: Follow-ups at 2.5 and 7 YearsPaolo Meglio MD0Paolo Gianni Giampietro MD1Rossella Carello MD2Elena Galli MD, FhD3San Pietro Hospital, Fatebenefratelli Research Center, Rome, ItalySan Pietro Hospital, Fatebenefratelli Research Center, Rome, ItalySan Pietro Hospital, Fatebenefratelli Research Center, Rome, ItalySan Pietro Hospital, Fatebenefratelli Research Center, Rome, ItalyBackground The present report was a follow-up investigation at 2.5- and 7-year intervals of a previous study of 20 children with moderate-to-severe immunoglobulin E (IgE) mediated hen's egg (HE) allergy who received oral immunotherapy (OIT) with raw HE. The study design of the previous study divided the 20 subjects into two groups of 10 each: (1) group 1, the OIT group (OIT-G), and, (2) group 2, an age-matched control group (C-G). In that study, 8 of 10 of the children in the OIT-G were successfully desensitized, one child was partially desensitized, and desensitization failed in one child. The aims of the present study were to evaluate the long-term effectiveness and safety profile of OIT with raw HE, and to assess the course and prognostic value of skin-prick tests (SPT) and serum-specific HE-IgEs in this study population. Methods Of the 20 children who were recalled, 2 dropped out, which left 18 to be evaluated. Information on their HE intake was recorded, and SPTs with HE allergen extracts and with raw and hard-boiled HE were performed. Ovomucoid- and ovalbumin-specific IgE levels were also measured. Results At the first (2.5-year) and second (7-year) follow-ups, 87.5% of the children in the OIT-G who tolerated raw HE were still tolerant, whereas the children in the C-G were significantly less tolerant. Overall, cutaneous sensitivity to HE significantly decreased after the 6-month desensitization period and at both follow-ups with regard to the OIT-G but not with regard to the C-G. A significant reduction in serum ovomucoid- and ovalbumin-specific IgE levels was seen in both the OIT-G and the C-G. Conclusion Clinical raw HE tolerance induced by OTT persists over time. Negativization of SPTs could be considered a more reliable prognostic indicator of clinical tolerance to raw HE than the reduction in specific-HE IgE levels. Raw-HE OIT would seem to be a promising method to treat HE allergy.https://doi.org/10.2500/ar.2017.8.0211
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paolo Meglio MD
Paolo Gianni Giampietro MD
Rossella Carello MD
Elena Galli MD, FhD
spellingShingle Paolo Meglio MD
Paolo Gianni Giampietro MD
Rossella Carello MD
Elena Galli MD, FhD
Oral Immunotherapy in Children with IgE-mediated Hen's Egg Allergy: Follow-ups at 2.5 and 7 Years
Allergy & Rhinology
author_facet Paolo Meglio MD
Paolo Gianni Giampietro MD
Rossella Carello MD
Elena Galli MD, FhD
author_sort Paolo Meglio MD
title Oral Immunotherapy in Children with IgE-mediated Hen's Egg Allergy: Follow-ups at 2.5 and 7 Years
title_short Oral Immunotherapy in Children with IgE-mediated Hen's Egg Allergy: Follow-ups at 2.5 and 7 Years
title_full Oral Immunotherapy in Children with IgE-mediated Hen's Egg Allergy: Follow-ups at 2.5 and 7 Years
title_fullStr Oral Immunotherapy in Children with IgE-mediated Hen's Egg Allergy: Follow-ups at 2.5 and 7 Years
title_full_unstemmed Oral Immunotherapy in Children with IgE-mediated Hen's Egg Allergy: Follow-ups at 2.5 and 7 Years
title_sort oral immunotherapy in children with ige-mediated hen's egg allergy: follow-ups at 2.5 and 7 years
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Allergy & Rhinology
issn 2152-6567
publishDate 2017-10-01
description Background The present report was a follow-up investigation at 2.5- and 7-year intervals of a previous study of 20 children with moderate-to-severe immunoglobulin E (IgE) mediated hen's egg (HE) allergy who received oral immunotherapy (OIT) with raw HE. The study design of the previous study divided the 20 subjects into two groups of 10 each: (1) group 1, the OIT group (OIT-G), and, (2) group 2, an age-matched control group (C-G). In that study, 8 of 10 of the children in the OIT-G were successfully desensitized, one child was partially desensitized, and desensitization failed in one child. The aims of the present study were to evaluate the long-term effectiveness and safety profile of OIT with raw HE, and to assess the course and prognostic value of skin-prick tests (SPT) and serum-specific HE-IgEs in this study population. Methods Of the 20 children who were recalled, 2 dropped out, which left 18 to be evaluated. Information on their HE intake was recorded, and SPTs with HE allergen extracts and with raw and hard-boiled HE were performed. Ovomucoid- and ovalbumin-specific IgE levels were also measured. Results At the first (2.5-year) and second (7-year) follow-ups, 87.5% of the children in the OIT-G who tolerated raw HE were still tolerant, whereas the children in the C-G were significantly less tolerant. Overall, cutaneous sensitivity to HE significantly decreased after the 6-month desensitization period and at both follow-ups with regard to the OIT-G but not with regard to the C-G. A significant reduction in serum ovomucoid- and ovalbumin-specific IgE levels was seen in both the OIT-G and the C-G. Conclusion Clinical raw HE tolerance induced by OTT persists over time. Negativization of SPTs could be considered a more reliable prognostic indicator of clinical tolerance to raw HE than the reduction in specific-HE IgE levels. Raw-HE OIT would seem to be a promising method to treat HE allergy.
url https://doi.org/10.2500/ar.2017.8.0211
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