Poster Session II – Poster of Distinction II - A188 FOOD-SPECIFIC CD4+ FOXP3+ REGULATORY T CELLS IDENTIFY DELAYED-HYPERSENSITIVITY ALLERGIES AND FOOD TRIGGERS IN PEDIATRIC PATIENTS
C Poloni, A Sze, J Nguyen, E Giles, T Steiner, L Cook

TL;DR
A new blood test identifies food allergies in children with EOE and FPIES by measuring regulatory T cells and inflammatory responses.
Contribution
A novel blood-based assay detects food-specific immune responses and predicts food triggers in pediatric EOE and FPIES patients.
Findings
Food-specific FOXP3+ regulatory T cells are significantly reduced in EOE and FPIES patients compared to controls.
Proportions of FOXP3+ cells can distinguish EOE/FPIES patients from controls and predict FPIES trigger foods.
Elevated IL-6, IFNγ, and TNFα levels in food-stimulated cultures indicate inflammatory responses in patients.
Abstract
Eosinophilic oesophagitis (EOE) and food protein-induced enterocolitis syndrome (FPIES) are delayed-hypersensitivity reactions to food proteins with increasing prevalence in Australia and Canada. Currently, there are no blood-based assays to identify EOE/FPIES food triggers, and clinicians rely on endoscopy, food elimination diets, and systemic steroid use to identify and treat disease. Here, we present a novel blood-based assay to detect food triggers and identify disease mechanisms in EOE and FPIES paediatric patients. 24 paediatric patients (12 EOE, 12 non-EOE controls) from Monash Children’s Hospital (Melbourne, Australia) and 8 paediatric patients (8 FPIES) from BC Children’s Hospital (Vancouver, Canada) were enrolled. Peripheral blood was acquired during routine endoscopy. Whole blood was stimulated with food antigens for 44-48 hours. T cell phenotyping was carried out via flow…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEosinophilic Esophagitis · Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Research · Child Nutrition and Feeding Issues
