Conference Coverage

Foods can still trigger eosinophilic esophagitis after allergy outgrown

View on the News

EoE may exist before it manifests


Dr. Hugh A. Sampson

Just because patients who had a food allergy now tolerate a food doesn’t mean that they’re going to be absolutely clear. One of the questions we have is whether these people really had EoE before but, because they also had IgE-mediated food allergy and weren’t eating the food, they didn’t have the demonstration of EoE.

We also know from several of our oral immunotherapy trials that some of these patients, once they go on oral immunotherapy, do develop EoE as well. I think it’s something we have to be watching for.

Dr. Hugh A. Sampson is a professor of pediatrics, allergy, and immunology at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York. He made these comments during a press briefing at the meeting. Dr. Sampsom disclosed relationships with Danone, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Allertein Therapeutics, Regeneron, and Novartis.


 

AT 2014 AAAAI ANNUAL MEETING

SAN DIEGO – Seventeen of 425 children who had eosinophilic esophagitis caused by a specific food developed the condition after outgrowing the allergy to that food, a retrospective study found.

People who outgrow a food allergy may be at risk of developing eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) to the same food, Dr. Jonathan Spergel said during a press briefing at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology.

He and his associates studied data on 1,025 children with EoE seen at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia in 2000-2012 to assess the prevalence of food allergy. In 425 children (42%), a specific food was identified as the EoE culprit – reintroducing the food to the diet caused esophageal changes on biopsy or biopsy changes normalized when the food was removed from the diet.

Dr. Jonathan M. Spergel

Eighty-four children had a history of IgE-mediated food allergy. Milk, egg, wheat, and soy were the most common food triggers of EoE in the 425 children in the study and in a subset of 17 who had outgrown IgE-mediated allergy to the specific food, reported Dr. Spergel, chief of the allergy section at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. Sixteen of the 17 patients had atopic disease. The most common foods causing IgE-mediated allergy were peanuts, tree nuts, eggs, and milk.

The development of EoE coincided with reintroducing the food triggers. The time between outgrowing an allergy and reintroducing the food, triggering EoE, averaged 2 years but ranged from 6 months to 5 years.

Notably, two of the children who outgrew their food allergy had a normal biopsy of the esophagus when they had the food allergy, he said.

The findings support other recent studies suggesting that the pathophysiologies of EoE and IgE-mediated food allergy are distinct from each other, and that both can occur in the same individual to the same food, Dr. Spergel said. The mechanism by which EoE develops is poorly understood.

"I think these kids probably always had EoE to the food, but they weren’t eating it" because of the allergy, he said. "From 1% to 15% on oral immunotherapy get EoE, depending on which group you look at. I don’t think we caused" EoE by giving oral immunotherapy, he added. "We uncovered it."

Although it is rare for children who outgrow a food allergy to later develop EoE to that food, it’s worth keeping in mind if a child starts vomiting often or complains of stomachaches months or years later, Dr. Spergel said. Keeping the possibility in mind may help clinicians rule out other etiologies and detect EoE faster. "You have to take it seriously and get it checked out," he said.

Of the 84 patients with IgE-mediated food allergy, the 17 who outgrew the allergy and then developed EoE to the same food were significantly older (12 years, on average), compared with 67 patients who developed EoE from a different food from the one that caused their allergy.

The lead author on the study was Dr. Solrun Melkorka Meggadottir, a fellow at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. The findings have been submitted to the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.

Dr. Spergel and Dr. Meggadottir reported having no relevant financial disclosures.

sboschert@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @sherryboschert

Recommended Reading

Prenatal acetaminophen exposure may affect ADHD in childhood
MDedge Family Medicine
Pediatric hypertension: Often missed and mismanaged
MDedge Family Medicine
Stroke risk jumps after head, neck trauma
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Traumatic injury ups stroke risk in people under 50
MDedge Family Medicine
Immunization update: The latest ACIP recommendations
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Practice pearls improve acne treatment
MDedge Family Medicine
Report highlights state of child abuse and neglect research
MDedge Family Medicine
Sizzle magnets: a worrisome buzz in the emergency department
MDedge Family Medicine
Campus meningitis outbreaks tamed but can our approach last?
MDedge Family Medicine
Omalizumab reduces epinephrine need during oral immunotherapy
MDedge Family Medicine