Abstract

Food allergies (FA) and asthma commonly coexist in patients, with asthma affecting 14% of school-age children and with FA affecting up to 8% of children in the United States. Compared with children without FA, children with FA are two to four times more likely to have asthma. The timings of food sensitization and FA seem to be strong predictors of asthma onset in childhood; results of studies show that food sensitization in the first few years of life is associated with increased odds of developing early wheeze. Having multiple FAs as opposed to a single FA further compounds the risk of asthma. Reciprocally, there is a strong association between the presence of food sensitization and/or FA and poor asthma control, including increased asthma-related health-care utilization and emergency medication use. Asthma is a risk factor in ∼75% of fatal food-related anaphylaxis cases. Therefore, besides FA education and management, patients with FA and with asthma should optimize medical therapy of their asthma and receive asthma education, including identifying possible asthma triggers. Furthermore, allergists should ensure that asthma must be well controlled before conducting oral food challenges. Timely administration of epinephrine is lifesaving and remains the first-line treatment during food-induced anaphylaxis, especially in patients with asthma. Among those biologic therapies that have been highly effective in treating asthma, omalizumab and dupilumab are now also being studied as treatments for FA.

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