Allergology International (Jan 2021)

Efficacy, safety, and parental anxiety in a randomized trial of two dietary instruction methods for children with suspected hen's egg allergy

  • Katsumasa Kitamura,
  • Kazunori Sakai,
  • Kemal Sasaki,
  • Teruaki Matsui,
  • Yoshihiro Takasato,
  • Shiro Sugiura,
  • Komei Ito

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 70, no. 1
pp. 114 – 120

Abstract

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Background: Little has been reported on how to introduce hen's egg into the diet of children with suspected egg allergy. We compared the efficacy, safety, and parental anxiety of two different dietary instruction methods to introduce egg. Methods: Eligible participants were children aged 1–4 years who were positive for egg white IgE, and ovomucoid IgE <3.5 kUA/L. Participants were either naïve in egg consumption or had a history of an immediate, but non-anaphylactic, allergic reaction to egg. After a negative result of baseline 2 g boiled egg white oral food challenge (OFC), participants were randomly assigned to the step-up OFC testing (SOFT) or home incrementing group. The primary outcome was the proportion of participants who were able to ingest 20 g of boiled egg white 6 months after initiation. This study is registered with the University Hospital Medical Information Network clinical trial registry (UMIN000024192). Results: Between September 2016 and August 2018, we randomly allocated 55 participants to the SOFT (n = 33 [60%]) and home incrementing (n = 22 [40%]) groups and analyzed 51 patients. Four patients were excluded because they were lost to follow-up. Thirty-one (96.9%) of 32 participants in the SOFT and 12 (63.2%) of 19 in the home incrementing group achieved the primary outcome (p = 0.003). No serious adverse reactions were observed in either group. Parental anxiety significantly improved during treatment in both groups. Conclusions: The SOFT method was more effective than home incrementing as dietary instruction to introduce egg in children with suspected egg allergy.

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