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Gradual Egg-tolerance Induction in Hen's Egg Allergic Children Who Tolerate Baked Egg (TETI-II Study)

D

Dominque Bullens

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Egg Hypersensitivity

Treatments

Behavioral: assigned period of specific dietary restrictions

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

The investigators want to test the hypothesis that a total period of 12 months of stepwise open egg introduction is not inferior when compared to a total period of 20 months gradual open egg introduction of a certain egg product with regard to full egg tolerance induction.

Full description

  1. The investigators want to test the hypothesis that a total period of 12 months of stepwise open egg introduction is not inferior when compared to a total period of 20 months gradual open egg introduction of a certain egg product (see steps for the specific egg products) with regard to full egg tolerance induction.

    Step 1: open baked egg test passed (either at home or in the hospital): this is routine clinical practice; afterwards daily intake of increasing amounts of heated egg (amounts to be noted in diary)

    Step 2: open provocation test at home with 10 minutes hard-boiled egg, both hen's egg white and yolk, passed; afterwards weekly intake of either hard-boiled egg white or yolk or both (amounts and days to be noted in diary)

    Step 3: open provocation test at home with omelet, pancake or scrambled egg passed; afterwards weekly or two-weekly intake of one of these specific preparation forms or of the previous preparation forms (amounts, days and preparation to be noted in diary)

    Step 4: open provocation test at home with 4 minutes fried or poached egg or softly boiled egg with liquid yolk; afterwards regular intake of one of these preparation forms or one of the prior steps (amounts, days and preparation to be noted in diary)

    Step 5: open provocation test at home with "raw" egg: eg. In chocolate mousse; mayonnaise or tiramisu; afterwards unlimited intake of all egg containing preparation forms (for 3 months in both groups to be noted in the diary)

    If tolerance to a certain step is not yet present (this is: if any reaction occurred during the months registered between two steps), the next step will be postponed with the length of the previous step. The number of failures (any reaction in relation to egg ingestion), the type of reaction and the additional time period necessary before the next step can be taken, will be recorded.

  2. The investigators will also study the time to complete tolerance in the complete cohort (this is the time to complete step 1 to step 5).

  3. Furthermore, the investigators want to study the induction of IL-10-producing ICOS-expressing hen's egg specific Treg cells in vitro paralleling tolerance induction.

  4. The investigators also want to study whether we can correlate the results of the in-house developed in vitro BAT with different heated hen's egg ingredients to the results of the egg provocation test and whether BAT could substitute for egg OFC tests for the different steps in the future.

Enrollment

62 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

12 months to 18 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Children (1-18y) had or have a clinical diagnosis of IgE mediated hen's egg allergy based on positive history as well as skin prick testing and/or specific IgE detection by CAPtest in an allergy clinic
  2. Children are at least 12 months old before introduction of heated egg is considered
  3. Children did not suffer from grade 4 anaphylaxis due to egg-ingestion at presentation (for grade 4 anaphylaxis, see EAACI anaphylaxis guidelines, Muraro A et al, Allergy. 2014 Aug;69(8):1008-25).
  4. Children have specific IgE levels to Gal d 1 below 1.2 kU/mL (12-24 months) or below 5 kU/mL (>24 months) or have a level that predicts a good chance (>75%) to pass the baked egg provocation test by cake (see Bartnikas LM et al, J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract 2013; 1: 354-360) and/or children passed baked egg provocation test by cake executed on clinical judgement.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Children had grade 4 anaphylaxis (for grade 4 anaphylaxis, see EAACI anaphylaxis guidelines, Muraro A et al, Allergy. 2014 Aug;69(8):1008-25) due to egg ingestion
  2. Children are younger than 12 months old at the moment of passing cake open provocation test
  3. Parents are not able or not willing to adhere to a certain egg step-containing diet on a regular basis at home
  4. Parents and/or children are not willing to give IC/assent

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

62 participants in 2 patient groups

"Very short arm" (12 months)
Active Comparator group
Description:
Very short arm (12 months): 3 months between every step. Step by step gradual introduction of egg containing food products during 12 months, unless next step can not be taken.
Treatment:
Behavioral: assigned period of specific dietary restrictions
"Short arm" (20 months)
Active Comparator group
Description:
Short arm (20 months): 5 months between every step. Step by step gradual introduction of egg containing food products during 20 months, unless next step can not be taken.
Treatment:
Behavioral: assigned period of specific dietary restrictions

Trial contacts and locations

4

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Central trial contact

Dominique Bullens, MD, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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