Oral food challenge failures among foods restricted because of atopic dermatitis

2019 
Abstract Background Recent studies have suggested that removing foods from the diet to manage atopic dermatitis (AD), based on positive allergy test results, may lead to immediate allergic reactions on reintroduction of that food. Objective To examine the frequency of oral food challenge (OFC) failures among foods removed from the diet as suspected AD triggers, focusing on the 5 major food allergens in the United States. Methods OFCs to egg, milk, peanut, soy, and wheat, performed from 2008 to 2014, at a children's hospital's allergy clinics, were reviewed. OFCs were offered based on history and laboratory values. Reasons for food avoidance were classified as food allergy (IgE-mediated reaction occurring within 2 hours); sensitization only (lack of introduction because of positive test results); and removal because of test results during AD evaluation. Results There were 442 OFCs performed, with 89 failures (20.1%). Reasons for OFCs included a history of food allergy (320 of 442 [72.4%]), food sensitization without any introduction (77 of 442 [17.4%]), and AD (45 of 442 [10.2%]). OFC failures among those who had food allergy (70 of 320 [21.9%]), sensitization only (13 of 77 [16.9%]), and suspected AD trigger (6 of 45 [13.3%]) did not significantly differ ( P  = .63). Wheat was more likely to be avoided than the other 4 foods for AD concerns ( P Conclusion The frequency of OFC failure among those who removed foods suspected as AD triggers was 13.3%, indicating a loss of tolerance. Restriction of foods to manage AD must be done with caution and close monitoring.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    29
    References
    5
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []