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Follow-up to Adolescence after Early Peanut Introduction for Allergy Prevention

Follow-up to Adolescence after Early Peanut Introduction for Allergy Prevention
Follow-up to Adolescence after Early Peanut Introduction for Allergy Prevention

BACKGROUND: A randomized trial demonstrated consumption of peanut from infancy to age 5 years prevented the development of peanut allergy. An extension of that trial demonstrated the effect persisted after 1 year of peanut avoidance. This follow-up trial examined the durability of peanut tolerance at age 144 months after years of ad libitum peanut consumption.

METHODS: Participants from a randomized peanut consumption trial were assessed for peanut allergy following an extended period of eating or avoiding peanuts as desired. The primary end point was the rate of peanut allergy at age 144 months.

RESULTS: We enrolled 508 of the original 640 participants (79.4%); 497 had complete primary end point data. At age 144 months, peanut allergy remained significantly more prevalent in participants in the original peanut avoidance group than in the original peanut consumption group (15.4% [38 of 246 participants] vs. 4.4% [11 of 251 participants]; P<0.001). Participants in both groups reported avoiding peanuts for prolonged periods of time between 72 and 144 months. Participants at 144 months in the peanut consumption group had levels of Ara h2-specific immunoglobulin E (a peanut allergen associated with anaphylaxis) of 0.03 ± 3.42 kU/l and levels of peanut-specific immunoglobulin G4 of 535.5 ± 4.98 μg/l, whereas participants in the peanut avoidance group had levels of Ara h2-specific immunoglobulin E of 0.06 ± 11.21 kU/l and levels of peanut-specific immunoglobulin G4 of 209.3 ± 3.84 μg/l. Adverse events were uncommon, and the majority were related to the food challenge.

CONCLUSIONS: Peanut consumption, starting in infancy and continuing to age 5 years, provided lasting tolerance to peanut into adolescence irrespective of subsequent peanut consumption, demonstrating that long-term prevention and tolerance can be achieved in food allergy. (Funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and others; ITN070AD, ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT03546413.).

Humans, Peanut Hypersensitivity/prevention & control, Follow-Up Studies, Arachis/immunology, Female, Male, Child, Preschool, Infant, Adolescent, Immunoglobulin E/blood, Child, Immune Tolerance
2766-5526
EVIDoa2300311
Du Toit, George
7930b820-e6f7-4c4c-866c-4334017d1106
Huffaker, Michelle F
5f730e5d-be1a-401b-a8c0-dcc2df39eca9
Radulovic, Suzana
8e9bce98-67a2-4999-9898-ccae71e55aa3
Feeney, Mary
29a6a117-af58-431f-90ad-d29495c665c8
Fisher, Helen R
0120c9ec-635f-4c74-9619-200842a2a39e
Byron, Margie
9be3256c-89b5-4514-ba4e-d7556273e52c
Dunaway, Lars
50474afa-7228-4448-9f35-ec2896bc8f52
Calatroni, Agustin
160c92a6-78cc-4a1f-93ed-072205d0cbde
Johnson, Molly
a3061c12-34f6-4cb5-be35-6a85580897d1
Foong, Ru-Xin
e0631c80-dcb3-49e9-8965-b6a1a71d0c78
Marques-Mejias, Andreina
bfbca6a5-b518-4855-bb71-8898e67bd922
Bartha, Irene
e83c55fe-8916-491e-9ab0-1b3846d52fee
Basting, Monica
0b4bc8e4-88a3-46d5-80ee-40228ad58c17
Brough, Helen A
ad550b22-eed8-4a61-9703-bd16aea45873
Baloh, Carolyn
c92b1791-777a-4116-9a07-8db46e46a80f
Laidlaw, Tanya M
287778d4-cca8-4f46-8fad-21fce19f4cef
Bahnson, Henry T
2ecc6945-97fd-46bc-8d46-42606d4ccfe0
Roberts, Graham
ea00db4e-84e7-4b39-8273-9b71dbd7e2f3
Plaut, Marshall
d6491653-2a2f-4a73-bbfa-cb9b541fac46
Wheatley, Lisa M
91b28142-b02f-430c-8498-e50aa7ce2140
Lack, Gideon
cac030a2-c358-4880-a91d-d67d06e8e321
Immune Tolerance Network LEAP-Trio Trial Team
Du Toit, George
7930b820-e6f7-4c4c-866c-4334017d1106
Huffaker, Michelle F
5f730e5d-be1a-401b-a8c0-dcc2df39eca9
Radulovic, Suzana
8e9bce98-67a2-4999-9898-ccae71e55aa3
Feeney, Mary
29a6a117-af58-431f-90ad-d29495c665c8
Fisher, Helen R
0120c9ec-635f-4c74-9619-200842a2a39e
Byron, Margie
9be3256c-89b5-4514-ba4e-d7556273e52c
Dunaway, Lars
50474afa-7228-4448-9f35-ec2896bc8f52
Calatroni, Agustin
160c92a6-78cc-4a1f-93ed-072205d0cbde
Johnson, Molly
a3061c12-34f6-4cb5-be35-6a85580897d1
Foong, Ru-Xin
e0631c80-dcb3-49e9-8965-b6a1a71d0c78
Marques-Mejias, Andreina
bfbca6a5-b518-4855-bb71-8898e67bd922
Bartha, Irene
e83c55fe-8916-491e-9ab0-1b3846d52fee
Basting, Monica
0b4bc8e4-88a3-46d5-80ee-40228ad58c17
Brough, Helen A
ad550b22-eed8-4a61-9703-bd16aea45873
Baloh, Carolyn
c92b1791-777a-4116-9a07-8db46e46a80f
Laidlaw, Tanya M
287778d4-cca8-4f46-8fad-21fce19f4cef
Bahnson, Henry T
2ecc6945-97fd-46bc-8d46-42606d4ccfe0
Roberts, Graham
ea00db4e-84e7-4b39-8273-9b71dbd7e2f3
Plaut, Marshall
d6491653-2a2f-4a73-bbfa-cb9b541fac46
Wheatley, Lisa M
91b28142-b02f-430c-8498-e50aa7ce2140
Lack, Gideon
cac030a2-c358-4880-a91d-d67d06e8e321

Immune Tolerance Network LEAP-Trio Trial Team (2024) Follow-up to Adolescence after Early Peanut Introduction for Allergy Prevention. NEJM Evidence, 3 (6), EVIDoa2300311. (doi:10.1056/EVIDoa2300311).

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A randomized trial demonstrated consumption of peanut from infancy to age 5 years prevented the development of peanut allergy. An extension of that trial demonstrated the effect persisted after 1 year of peanut avoidance. This follow-up trial examined the durability of peanut tolerance at age 144 months after years of ad libitum peanut consumption.

METHODS: Participants from a randomized peanut consumption trial were assessed for peanut allergy following an extended period of eating or avoiding peanuts as desired. The primary end point was the rate of peanut allergy at age 144 months.

RESULTS: We enrolled 508 of the original 640 participants (79.4%); 497 had complete primary end point data. At age 144 months, peanut allergy remained significantly more prevalent in participants in the original peanut avoidance group than in the original peanut consumption group (15.4% [38 of 246 participants] vs. 4.4% [11 of 251 participants]; P<0.001). Participants in both groups reported avoiding peanuts for prolonged periods of time between 72 and 144 months. Participants at 144 months in the peanut consumption group had levels of Ara h2-specific immunoglobulin E (a peanut allergen associated with anaphylaxis) of 0.03 ± 3.42 kU/l and levels of peanut-specific immunoglobulin G4 of 535.5 ± 4.98 μg/l, whereas participants in the peanut avoidance group had levels of Ara h2-specific immunoglobulin E of 0.06 ± 11.21 kU/l and levels of peanut-specific immunoglobulin G4 of 209.3 ± 3.84 μg/l. Adverse events were uncommon, and the majority were related to the food challenge.

CONCLUSIONS: Peanut consumption, starting in infancy and continuing to age 5 years, provided lasting tolerance to peanut into adolescence irrespective of subsequent peanut consumption, demonstrating that long-term prevention and tolerance can be achieved in food allergy. (Funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and others; ITN070AD, ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT03546413.).

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 28 May 2024
Published date: June 2024
Keywords: Humans, Peanut Hypersensitivity/prevention & control, Follow-Up Studies, Arachis/immunology, Female, Male, Child, Preschool, Infant, Adolescent, Immunoglobulin E/blood, Child, Immune Tolerance

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 507730
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507730
ISSN: 2766-5526
PURE UUID: 4b087dbe-e004-428f-9c9b-cf0a873251a9
ORCID for Graham Roberts: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2252-1248

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 19 Dec 2025 18:21
Last modified: 20 Dec 2025 02:45

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Contributors

Author: George Du Toit
Author: Michelle F Huffaker
Author: Suzana Radulovic
Author: Mary Feeney
Author: Helen R Fisher
Author: Margie Byron
Author: Lars Dunaway
Author: Agustin Calatroni
Author: Molly Johnson
Author: Ru-Xin Foong
Author: Andreina Marques-Mejias
Author: Irene Bartha
Author: Monica Basting
Author: Helen A Brough
Author: Carolyn Baloh
Author: Tanya M Laidlaw
Author: Henry T Bahnson
Author: Graham Roberts ORCID iD
Author: Marshall Plaut
Author: Lisa M Wheatley
Author: Gideon Lack
Corporate Author: Immune Tolerance Network LEAP-Trio Trial Team

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