Food Allergy

New Research!!!

Would you allow your child to take part in a research study to cure food allergies? I just ran across the article below, and it gives hope that a cure could be found within 5 years! I don't know if I would allow my son to be apart though. I pray that he outgrows them soon on his own, but this is such a good sign! 

Duke University Medical Center?s Food Allergy Initiative is exploring a promising immunotherapy clinical study on both mice and human patients. The study seeks to find better ways to treat allergies by desensitizing allergic patients. Dr. Wesley Burks, chief of Pediatric Allergy and Immunology at Duke Medical Center, is part of a potentially groundbreaking study aimed at finding out whether children with peanut allergies can be desensitized to peanuts and eventually cured of the allergy altogether.

The study has children ingesting tiny, precise amounts of peanut flour every day, and gradually increasing the dose every two weeks. Patients are becoming increasingly less sensitive as the study continues. This would NOT be a study to take on in your own home! Patients receiving the peanut flour are closely monitored for hours after each dose, and an abundance of emergency medical care provisions are available should a severe reaction ensue.

Dr. Burks said the therapy works by depleting the body of chemicals that cause allergic reactions. If successful, desensitization therapy should be able to help all different kinds of food allergies. He is currently predicting that there will be a viable treatment for peanut allergies within 5 years! Wouldn?t that be great!! And thanks to a $1.475 million grant from The Food Allergy Project, both egg and milk allergies have also been added to the study. A future study will be oral immunotherapy for peanut and tree nut allergies.

Currently, the federal government, through the National Institutes of Health, spends less than $26 million per year on food allergy research. That research generally occurs at a five-institution consortium involving: Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York; Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore; Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC; University of Arkansas Children?s Hospital Research Institute, Little Rock; and National Jewish Medical and Research Center, Denver.

Clinical trials of the drug Xolair for peanut allergy were halted earlier in 2006 after two children experienced anaphylactic reactions. The children hadn?t yet been given the drug, but reacted to an oral challenge of peanuts to determine their level of tolerance. The establishment of tolerance levels was required in the enrollment process of the FDA (Food & Drug Administration). The manufacturer of Xolair, Genentech and two others companies, remain committed to continuing the trials, however oral challenges may not be included in the future.

Researchers at the Mt. Sinai School of Medicine in New York have been working with two Chinese herbal formulas ? one to treat asthma and one to prevent anaphylaxis to peanuts. Participants in the asthma study had results from the Chinese herbs similar to the control group taking the corticosteroid Prednisone. The herb to prevent peanut anaphylaxis has been studied on mice, yet the herbs completely blocked anaphylaxis for up to six months. Dr. Xiu-Min Li, a leader of the project, is now starting Phase 2 of the Clinical Trial as of late 2010, which involves people.

In 2007, the NIH released its long-anticipated Report of the NIH Expert Panel on Food Allergy Research, which found that ?food allergy has emerged as an important public health problem,? the first such statement from a federal government agency on the issue of life-threatening food allergies. The NIH Report calls for additional NIH-funded research to uncover the causes of food allergy, and for the development of clinical trials and treatments for the life-threatening disease. The NIH released the report on the heels of a hearing of the Senate Appropriations Committee at which Labor-HHS Subcommittee Chairman Tom Harkin (D-IA) called the increase in childhood food allergy ?alarming.?

There are many other clinical trials attempting to find a cure for food allergies. It?s possible that a cure will be found within the next 10 years!

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Re: New Research!!!

  • I actually looked into that study (pretty sure it was that one- or something very similar) but we didn't live locally and due to the amount of visits it was only open to local families.  I'd sign up if I could.  If I'm rembering correctly- this therapy is already being used in Europe (can't remember my sources though so it could be another, further along study).   
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