Conference Coverage

AAAAI: Early peanut consumption brings lasting protection from allergy


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM THE 2016 AAAAI ANNUAL MEETING

References

The EAT results suggest that an effective preventive dose of peanut in infants at least 3 months of age is roughly 2 g of peanut protein per week, equivalent to just under 2 tsp of peanut butter, according to Dr. Lack.

Simultaneously with presentation of the LEAP-On and EAT trials in Los Angeles, the studies were published online at NEJM.org (doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1514210 for LEAP-ON and 10.1056/NEJMoa1514209 for EAT).

LEAP-On was supported primarily by NIAID. EAT was funded mainly by the UK Foods Standards Agency and the Medical Research Council. Dr. Lack reported receiving grants from those agencies as well as Food Allergy Research and Education.

Pages

Recommended Reading

High IgE linked to poor treatment outcomes in AD patients
MDedge Family Medicine
Melatonin improves sleep, skin symptoms in pediatric AD
MDedge Family Medicine
Higher anemia risk for children with atopic disease
MDedge Family Medicine
Anti-TNF therapy can continue for IBD patients with skin lesions
MDedge Family Medicine
Nalbuphine reduced uremic pruritus in hemodialysis
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Treating your atopic dermatitis patients more effectively
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Prophylaxis for atopic dermatitis
MDedge Family Medicine
Mechanism for dust mite–triggered atopic dermatitis identified
MDedge Family Medicine
SDEF: Have higher degree of suspicion for pediatric allergic contact dermatitis
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: What’s new on atopic dermatitis drugs and cancer concerns?
MDedge Family Medicine