Strong Evidence Lacking Regarding Prevalence, Diagnosis, and Treatments for Food Allergies
Unregistered User
If this is not your name, click here.
Contact Us | Order Now | Journals | Bookstore | Register a colleague
 
  SEARCH  
News
Bookstore
Medline
The Web
Meetings & Congresses
Complete Doctor's Guide
 


 EXPLORE :
 news  All News
 webcasts All Webcasts
 All cases All Cases
 Meetings All Meetings & Congresses
 Medical All Medical Resources

top





New drugs / indications

English Dictionary

Medical Dictionary

Thesaurus



Warning | Privacy | Awards



 Favourite Journals 

Click here to choose your favourite journals


 Favourite Sites 

Click here to choose your favourite sites


 Languages 



  




Strong Evidence Lacking Regarding Prevalence, Diagnosis, and Treatments for Food Allergies

CHICAGO -- May 11, 2010 -- A review of previous research indicates that there are few high-quality studies on food allergies, with limited uniform criteria for making a diagnosis and determining prevalence and effective treatments, according to an article in the May 12 issue of JAMA.

Food allergies can have significant harmful effects on family economics, social interactions, school and work attendance and health-related quality of life. "However, currently licensed treatments target only the symptoms of reactions and anaphylaxis, not the allergies themselves," the authors wrote. There is no clear consensus regarding the prevalence or most effective diagnostic and management approaches to food allergies, according to background information in the article.

Jennifer J. Schneider Chafen, MD, VA Palo Alto Healthcare System, Palo Alto, California, and Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, and colleagues reviewed the available evidence on the prevalence, diagnosis, man-agement, and prevention of food allergies. For this analysis, the researchers identified 72 studies that met criteria. The studies reported data on food allergies to cow's milk, hen's egg, peanut, tree nut, fish, and shellfish, which account for more than 50% of all allergies to food.

The researchers write that their review found several key results:
· Food allergies affect more than 1% to 2% but <10% of the US population. Whether the prevalence of food allergies is increasing is not well established.

· Food challenges, skin prick testing, and serum food-specific immunoglobulin E all have a role to play in making the diagnosis but no one test has sufficient ease of use or sensitivity or specificity to be recommended over the other tests. Numerous other proposed diagnostic tests are of uncertain value due to lack of evidence.

· Although elimination diets are the mainstay of therapy, the researchers identified only 1 randomised controlled trial (RCT) of an elimination diet. "Many authorities would consider RCTs of elimination diets for serious life-threatening food allergy reactions unnecessary and unethical; however, it should be recognised that such studies are generally lacking for other potential food allergic conditions …"

· Immunotherapy, although currently not a licensed method for the treatment of food allergy, may be effective in generating desensitisation, but whether this treatment can also generate long-term tolerance remains to be determined. The safety of immunotherapy is likely to vary with the food allergen and the route of therapy administration and, to date, has not been adequately studied.

· Among high-risk infants, hydrolysed formula may prevent against cow's milk allergy but standardised definitions of high risk and hydrolysed formula do not exist. Probiotics in conjunction with breastfeeding, hypoallergenic formula, or both may help prevent food allergy but their independent effects remain unclear.

"This systematic review of food allergies found that the evidence on the prevalence, diagnosis, management, and prevention of food allergies is voluminous, diffuse, and critically limited by the lack of uniformity for the diagnosis of a food allergy, severely lim-iting conclusions about best practices for management and prevention," the authors concluded.

SOURCE: JAMA

E-mail this page
to a friend or colleague!
To print,
use this version




Any question regarding a medical diagnosis, treatment, referral, drug availability or pricing should be directed to either a licensed physician or to the product's manufacturer.

If you have any technical questions or other concerns about this site, feel free to contact us at webmaster@docguide.com.

All contents Copyright (c) 1995- Doctor's Guide Publishing Limited. All rights reserved.


Employment opportunities | Partnering opportunities