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Tree Nuts Allergies: Does a Single Nut Allergy Necessitate the Dietary Eviction of Other Tree Nuts? (ProNut)

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University Hospitals (UH)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Nut Allergy in Children

Treatments

Other: Oral food challenges to multiple nuts

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01744990
CER12-020

Details and patient eligibility

About

The aim of this study is to identify, based on standardized food provocation tests, which nuts allergic patients need a selective, or a complete dietary eviction of all kind of nuts (nuts being defined as peanut, all tree nuts, pine nut and sesame). The investigators postulate that predictive factors of multiple nut allergy are high specific immunoglobulin E level, positive skin tests and/or clinical markers, such as atopic dermatitis, presence of other food allergies or a history of a severe previous reaction

Full description

Food allergy in children is a disease of growing importance, current estimation in school age children are between 4 and 8 %. The most frequently involved foods in IgE reaction in school-aged children are hazelnut (especially in Switzerland according to the ongoing Swiss Registry, Wiesner et al, personal communication) and peanut. Tree nuts and peanut allergies are often involved in severe reactions, including cases of death by anaphylaxis. In addition, the disease is long-lasting as Fleischer et al could show that only 9% of children with nut allergies will outgrew from it. This number is worse than for peanut where a positive outcome is seen in 20% of the patients.

Food challenges are the most reliable tests to investigate a possible food allergy, but these are time consuming and may elicit severe reactions in patients with a previous history of anaphylactic reactions(8). There are no allergy tests able at this time to predict with certainty the clinical reactivity, although Sampson et al could identify a general tree nuts specific IgE cut-off level with a high positive predictive value for clinical reactivity.

It could be demonstrated, in well-designed studies, that in vitro cross-sensitivity between tree nuts (members of the oleaginous family) and peanut (members of the legume family) is frequent (86%). However, clinical reactions to tree nuts are estimated to be present in only 40% of peanut allergic patients. Therefore 60% of peanut allergic patients may eat tree nuts without reactions.

Similarly, there is a large in vitro cross-sensitivity between tree nuts. However, it is not known to date if this cross-sensitivity relates to clinical reactivity. Consequently, in case of one tree nut allergy, strict eviction to all nuts is largely recommended, and possibly results in a unnecessary dietary eviction of all tree nuts leading to a high impact on the quality of life of the children.

We aim to identify, based on standardized food provocation tests, which nuts allergic patients need a selective, or a complete dietary eviction of all kind of nuts (nuts being defined as peanut, all tree nuts, pine nut and sesame). We postulate that predictive factors of multiple nut allergy are high specific immunoglobulin E level, positive skin tests and/or clinical markers, such as atopic dermatitis, presence of other food allergies or a history of a severe previous reaction.

Enrollment

130 patients

Sex

All

Ages

12 months to 16 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Children 1 - 16 years of age at the time of inclusion (a minimum of 75 children < 6 years old required, over the 3 centers)
  • Children with convincing history of IgE-mediated systemic allergic reaction (not only oral symptoms) after consumption of one or more "nuts" (peanut, hazelnut, walnut, almond, cashew, pecan, Brazil, macadamia, pine nut, sesame) within last 12 months and SPT > 3 mm and/or positive specific IgE (>0.1 kU/l).
  • Children without a convincing history of IgE-mediated systemic allergic reaction (for example only oral symptoms) after consumption of one or more "nuts" (peanut, hazelnut, walnut, almond, cashew, pecan, brazil, macadamia, pistachio, pine nut, sesame) but with clear evidence of sensitization (SPT > 3 mm and/or positive specific IgE (> 0.1 kU/l) and a positive standardized food challenge to the nut.
  • Informed consent approved and signed by the patient's legal representative and, if applicable, by the child itself.

Exclusion criteria

  • Uncontrolled asthma (according to the European Guidelines)(13)
  • Chronic urticaria
  • Children with a chronic systemic disease
  • Children who are dependent on daily antihistamine use

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

130 participants in 1 patient group

Interventional single arm
Other group
Description:
Single group of children undergoing the same investigations and follow up
Treatment:
Other: Oral food challenges to multiple nuts

Trial contacts and locations

4

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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