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Use of Baked Milk in Oral Immunotherapy for Severe IgE-mediated Cow's Milk Protein Allergic Patients

S

Shamir Medical Center (Assaf-Harofeh)

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Cow's Milk Allergy

Treatments

Other: Baked milk

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01968278
39/12 Asaf

Details and patient eligibility

About

Oral immunotherapy (OIT) programs for milk, egg and peanut, desensitize patients to their respective allergens and thereby decrease their risk of morbidity and mortality. OIT programs, however, are not without adverse events, particularly in highly sensitive patients. Recently, it has been demonstrated that the administration of baked milk (BM) products to IgE-CMA patients that are non-reactive to BM, can promote tolerance to unheated milk (UM). The goal of our research is to determine whether BM can promote desensitization even in the highly sensitive patient, who reacts to baked milk as well. In a second step, we hypothesize BM-OIT will promote desensitization to unheated milk, as well.

Importance: The change in the risk/benefit ratio of such a program will alter the therapeutic approach to an IgE-CMP allergic patient.

Probable implications to Medicine: BM-OIT will allow highly sensitive patients to tolerate milk products, decreasing their risk of life-threatening reactions. Furthermore, analysis of the immune modulation parameters that change during the treatment program, should pave the way for defining mechanisms underlying tolerance in CMP allergy.

Full description

In our first aim, we will test over a four day induction (escalating) program, whether highly sensitive UM-reactive patients) can tolerate BM . Those successful will be randomized to a treated BM-OIT group (group A) and an observational control group (group B). In the second aim, the fraction of patients in Group A who successfully progress in BM-OIT (tolerate ≥ 360 mg BM) over a 6 month period will be determined and compared to the fraction of patients in Group B who can tolerate 360mg. The results will also be compared to the progression of highly sensitive IgE-CMA patients on UM-OIT (Group C, reactive to ≤21 mg of UM ). In aim-3, the fraction of BM-OIT patients able to tolerate minimally ≥ 12.5 mg of UM or higher than their initially eliciting dose. will be assessed.

Methods: Severe patients (>4 years) with a positive clinical history, SPT and a positive DBPCFC to CMP will be first tested for their ability to tolerate BM. The treatment group will undergo three rounds of oral induction, each consisting of 4 days and performed every 4 weeks. On day #1, the patient will be rapidly desensitized up to their threshold. On days 2-3, the maximum tolerable dose and interval is determined. Day #4 mimics the home treatment. Home treatment will then continue until the next induction. After 6 months of treatment patients will be evaluated for reactivity to UM.

Enrollment

50 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

4 to 30 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Patients with IgE-cow's milk allergy reacting to <12.5 mg (any reaction) on oral food challenge to unheated milk

Exclusion criteria

Patients with unstable asthma** or those with suspected compliance issues will be excluded. Patients with stable asthma are included.

  • defined as active wheezing and/or use of oral steroids within one month prior to initiation of program and/or FEV1<75% or a greater than 18% increase in FEV1 after bronchodilator treatment.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

50 participants in 2 patient groups

Baked milk group
Experimental group
Description:
BM (baked milk)
Treatment:
Other: Baked milk
Control
No Intervention group
Description:
IgE-cow's milk allergic patients not treated with OIT

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Yitzhak Katz, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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