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Eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) is a chronic immune mediated disease characterized by eosinophilic infiltration in esophageal epithelium and resulting in esophageal dysfunction.
While the exact pathogenesis is yet to be elucidated, EoE is considered an atopic disease. This classification is in part due to the inflammatory infiltrate of eosinophils, basophils and T-cells producing Th2 cytokines, yet it may also be triggered by environmental allergens. In addition, the rates of atopy are approximately 3 times higher in patients with EoE than in the general population. Furthermore, and most convincing, EoE is successfully managed with dietary exclusion of triggering groups in both pediatric and adult patients, further confirming the atopic nature of the disease.
The most frequent dietary trigger for EoE is milk, but there is limited data on the effect of baked dairy . Guidelines addressing the diagnosis and treatment of EoE in both children and adults have not addressed the use of baked dairy in patients with cow's milk triggered EoE.
Restrictive diets are often challenging for patients and contribute to a reduced quality of life. Some patients tolerate baked dairy products, which are less allergenic due to denaturation of proteins through heat. The potential for baked dairy to be included in the diet of milk-triggered EoE patients remains unexplored in current guidelines.
The aim of this study is to assess tolerability and safety of baked dairy in patients with EoE in whom cow's milk has been confirmed to be a trigger food for their disease.
Full description
This prospective, multi-center trial will include patients with EoE diagnosed according to the accepted definitions: symptoms of esophageal dysfunction and >15 Eos/HPF on an esophageal biopsy, who were confirmed to have cow's milk as a trigger by demonstrating improvement during elimination and histologic relapse following reintroduction.
Following full informed consent of the patient / guardians, patients will be offered to join the trial to assess their tolerance to baked dairy.
Due to the theoretical risk of developing IgE-mediated allergy on prolonged food protein type restriction, RAST-testing or skin-prick testing to cow milk will be undertaken to exclude IgE-mediated sensitization prior to introduction of baked daury. In patients with positive results, candidates can elect to withdraw from the study or alternatively an allergist will be consulted to consider the appropriateness of a medically observed baked dairy challenge.
Strict compliance with milk-free diet will be re-enforced for not less than 6 weeks prior to the patient's closest routine follow-up endoscopy. Baseline symptom profile will be recorded. Baseline endoscopy with routine biopsies (defined below) will be performed as part of the routine scheduled follow-up endoscopy as recommended by guidelines, in order to confirm histologic remission of EoE. Patients with baseline esophageal inflammation will be excluded from the study. Patients in histologic remission will be commenced on bake dairy containing diet with not less than 1 daily serving.
Repeat symptom profile assessed at 6 weeks and at 12 weeks, with repeat endoscopy with routine biopsies at 12±2 weeks. If symptoms recur prior to 12 weeks, endoscopy may be moved up earlier, from 6 weeks onwards.
Patients in clinical and histologic remission at 12 weeks will be followed until week 52 with repeat scheduled endoscopy. Baked dairy consumption will be permitted during the follow-up, but not be required daily as in the first time period. A baked dairy consumption diary will be collected over the 4 weeks prior to this endoscopy.
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20 participants in 1 patient group
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Dr. Oren Ledder Dr. Oren Ledder
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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