LOS ANGELES – Children who pass oral food challenges to baked egg and milk with wheat flour are at risk for reacting to baked goods made with nonwheat flours, according to a review of more than 200 pediatric food challenges at National Jewish Health in Denver.
The children were already known to be sensitive to egg and milk, and some were being challenged to see if exposure therapy was helping. Unbeknown to the pediatric food allergy team, a kitchen worker at National Jewish had started making muffins with rice flour, thinking it would be safer.
During the month of muffins with rice flour, the failure rate for baked egg challenge muffins rose from 28% (33/120) to 58% (11/19) with rice flour. Failure to baked milk muffins rose from 14% (9/66) to 36% (5/14) (J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2016 Feb. doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2015.12.579).
Adjusting for age, gender, and atopic dermatitis, children were more than five times more likely to fail baked eggs without wheat (odds ratio, 5.4; P = .002), and more than four times more likely to fail baked milk (OR, 4.06; P = .05).
Given that the phenomenon hasn’t been reported before, “This was very surprising to us,” said study investigator Dr. Bruce Lanser, director of the pediatric food allergy program at National Jewish. “You have to warn parents that if children pass a baked challenge with wheat, they have to continue to eat their baked milk and egg with wheat. Gluten-free products are not going to have the same effect.
“If somebody is avoiding wheat because it causes a bit of redness and itchiness, you have to clear that wheat allergy” before moving to baked egg and milk, Dr. Lanser added.
There’s also concern that “kids will go home after passing a wheat muffin challenge, eat something that’s gluten-free, and have a reaction,” he noted. Wheat-free baked goods might also not build tolerance as well, although that’s not clear from the study, Dr. Lanser said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology.
Wheat seems to have something unique that alters the allergic properties of egg and milk proteins to help children outgrow their sensitivities. “Rice doesn’t have the same effect,” he observed, and it’s not known if any other grains do. Dr. Lanser said he is interested in looking into rye, barley, oats, and other alternatives.
The mean age of the children in the study was 6 years, and most children had multiple food allergies. Sensitization was confirmed by skin tests and specific IgE.
Meanwhile, there’s a new rule in the National Jewish kitchen: Unless a child has true celiac disease, “always make [challenge] muffins with wheat,” Dr. Lanser said.
There was no industry funding for the work, and the investigators had no disclosures.