Abstract

Food allergy is a growing public health problem, and in many affected individuals, the food allergy begins early in life and persists as a lifelong condition (e.g., peanut allergy). Although early clinical practice guidelines recommended delaying the introduction of peanut and other allergenic foods in children, this may have in fact contributed to the dramatic increase in the prevalence of food allergy in recent decades. In January 2017, new guidelines on peanut allergy prevention were released which represented a significant paradigm shift in early food introduction. Development of these guidelines was prompted by findings from the Learning Early About Peanut Allergy study—the first randomized trial to investigate early allergen introduction as a strategy to prevent peanut allergy. This article will review and compare the new guidelines with previous guidelines on food introduction, and will also review recent evidence that has led to the paradigm shift in early food introduction.

Highlights

  • Peanut allergy is a potentially anaphylactic food allergy which is very difficult to outgrow once acquired [1]

  • The preferred test is the skin prick testing (SPT), peanut-specific immunoglobulin E (IgE) blood testing is recommended in non-allergist settings such as family medicine, pediatrics, and dermatology, since it is more widely available

  • The increase in food allergy, peanut allergy, prevalence in recent decades is a major public health problem and may, in part, be due to years of recommending delayed introduction of foods based on expert opinion only

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Summary

Introduction

Peanut allergy is a potentially anaphylactic food allergy which is very difficult to outgrow once acquired [1]. Clinical practice guidelines recommended delaying the introduction of peanut-containing foods until the age of 3 years [3].

Results
Conclusion
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