Evaluating the efficacy of a novel home-based oral food challenge protocol for pediatric food protein induced enterocolitis syndrome
Emily G. Morris, Peter W. Huan, Jennifer L. P. Protudjer, Lucy Li, Natalie Rondilla, Jeevan Abraham, Harold Kim

TL;DR
A new home-based method for testing food allergies in children shows high success and safety with no severe reactions.
Contribution
A novel home-based oral food challenge protocol with gradual dosing for FPIES diagnosis is evaluated for efficacy and safety.
Findings
80.85% of patients completed the OFC protocol without significant reactions.
No severe reactions occurred during the protocol.
Patients reacting to milk were less likely to complete the protocol, though not statistically significant.
Abstract
Oral food challenges (OFCs) are considered the gold standard for diagnosis of food protein–induced enterocolitis syndrome (FPIES), a non-immunoglobulin E mediated gastrointestinal food allergy characterized by delayed, repetitive vomiting, lethargy, and sometimes diarrhea, primarily affecting infants and young children. Our modified approach to OFCs involves smaller, gradually increased doses to mitigate the risk of severe reactions. We aimed to measure the successful completion of this OFC protocol. In a retrospective chart review, patients age < 18 years, who had 1 + episode of acute FPIES between 2015 and 2023 were identified using an allergy clinic database. Patients underwent OFCs with home up dosing every 2–4 weeks. Steps included 1%, 2%, 5%, 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 60%, 80%, and 100% of the final serving amount. The primary outcome was successful completion, i.e. absence of severe…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFood Allergy and Anaphylaxis Research · Celiac Disease Research and Management · Infant Nutrition and Health
